Abstract

AbstractThemospheric conditions during a minor geomagnetic event of 3 and 4 February 2022 has been investigated using disk temperature (Tdisk) observations from Global‐scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) mission and model simulations. GOLD observed that the Tdisk increases by more than 60 K during the storm event when compared with pre‐storm quiet days. A comparison of the Tdisk with effective temperatures (Teff, i.e., a weighted average based on airglow emission layer) from Mass Spectrometer Incoherent Scatter radar version 2 (MSIS2) and Multiscale Atmosphere‐Geospace Environment (MAGE) models shows that MAGE outperforms MSIS2 during this particular event. MAGE underestimates the Teff by about 2%, whereas MSIS2 underestimates it by 7%. As temperature enhancements lead to an expansion of the thermosphere and resulting density changes, the value of the temperature enhancement observed by GOLD can be utilized to find a GOLD equivalent MSIS2 (GOLD‐MSIS) simulation—from a set of MSIS2 runs obtained by varying geomagnetic ap index values. From the MSIS‐GOLD run we found that the thermospheric density enhancement varies with altitude from 15% (at 150) to 80% (at 500 km). Independent simulations from the MAGE model also show a comparable enhancement in neutral density. These results suggest that even a modest storm could impact the thermospheric densities significantly and GOLD data can be used to improve the empirical and assimilative models of the thermosphere.

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