Abstract

AbstractAs activity in Earth orbit continues to grow, it is important to characterize the environment of near‐Earth space. One means of remotely sensing lower thermospheric neutrals is by measurement of O and N2 density through the observation of far‐ultraviolet (FUV) airglow of atomic oxygen at 135.6 nm and the N2 Lyman‐Birge‐Hopfield (LBH) bands (~130–180 nm), as has been done on the Ionospheric Connection Explorer (ICON), Global‐scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD), and Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics (TIMED) missions. This technique is not without limitations, however, as the FUV measurements suffer from contamination by ionospheric emissions at low latitudes and auroral emissions excited by precipitating energetic electrons and protons at high latitudes. Previous work has shown the potential for making measurements of O and N2 density in the lower‐middle thermosphere using observations of extreme‐ultraviolet (EUV) airglow. This measurement approach has a potential advantage in that it does not have an inherent ionospheric emission that must be accounted for. Additionally, these emissions are primarily excited directly by solar UV rather than electron impact and thus have the potential to enable expansion of neutral density observations into the auroral zone and polar cap where the FUV measurement cannot be applied. This article demonstrates a new approach and algorithm designed to retrieve thermospheric O and N2 density from 150 to 400 km using measurements from the ICON EUV instrument. The retrieval results throughout 2020 are summarized and compared to measurements from ICON FUV, GOLD, and SWARM.

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