Abstract

AbstractThis study investigates thermospheric seasonal variations composed of annual and semiannual oscillations (AO and SAO) in the column density ratio of atomic oxygen to molecular nitrogen observed by Global‐scale Observations of Limb and Disk. On the basis of multiple analysis approaches, it is revealed that the AO is the predominant component at middle latitudes, while the SAO tends to be increasingly important toward the lower latitudes. The SAO is also evident in the southern mid‐latitudes. Quantitative analyses demonstrate that AO (SAO) peaks around winter solstices (equinoxes). Additionally, the seasonal variation at low‐latitudes exhibits greater amplitudes in the early morning and around noon, whereas it gradually weakens from early morning toward late afternoon at mid‐latitudes. A hypothesis is that seasonal variations are likely modulated by atmospheric tides, including those generated in the thermosphere and those propagating upward from the lower atmosphere.

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