Abstract

Kellogg, W. W. (1961, J. Met. 18, 373) suggested that transport of atomic oxygen from the summer into the winter hemisphere and subsequent release of energy by three body recombination, O + O + N 2→ O 2 + N 2 + E, may contribute significantly to the so-called mesopause temperature anomaly (increase in temperature from summer to winter). Earlier model calculations have shown that Kellogg's mechanism produces about a 10% increase in the temperature from summer to winter at 90 km. This process, however, is partly compensated by differential heating from absorption of UV radiation associated with dissociation of O 2. In the auroral region of the thermosphere, there is a steady (component of) energy dissipation by Joule heating (with a peak near 130 km) causing a redistribution and depletion of atomic oxygen due to wind-induced diffusion. With the removal of O. latent chemical energy normally released by three body recombination is also removed, and the result is that the temperature decreases by almost 2% near 90 km. Through dynamic feedback, this process reduces the depletion of atomic oxygen by about 25% and the temperature perturbation in the exosphere from 10% to 7% at polar latitudes. Under the influence of the internal dynamo interaction, the prevailing zonal circulation in the upper thermosphere (small in magnitude) changes direction when the redistribution of recombination energy is considered. The above described effects are very sensitive to the adopted rates of eddy diffusion. They are also strongly time dependent and are significantly reduced for disturbances associated with magnetic storms.

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