Abstract

Abstract. A new all-sky imaging Fabry-Perot spectrometer has been installed at Mawson station (67°36' S, 62°52' E), Antarctica. This instrument is capable of recording independent spectra from many tens of locations across the sky simultaneously. Useful operation began in March 2007, with spectra recorded on a total of 186 nights. Initial analysis has focused on the large-scale daily and average behavior of winds and temperatures derived from observations of the 630.0 nm airglow line of atomic oxygen, originating from a broad layer centered around 240 km altitude, in the ionospheric F-region. The 1993 Horizontal Wind Model (HWM93), NRLMSISE-00 atmospheric model, and the Coupled Thermosphere/Ionosphere Plasmasphere (CTIP) model were used for comparison. During the geomagnetically quiet period studied, observed winds and temperatures were generally well modelled, although temperatures were consistently higher than NRLMSISE-00 predicted, by up to 100 K. CTIP temperatures better matched our data, particularly later in the night, but predicted zonal winds which were offset from those observed by 70–180 ms−1 westward. During periods of increased activity both winds and temperatures showed much greater variability over time-scales of less than an hour. For the active night presented here, a period of 45 min saw wind speeds decrease by around 180 ms−1, and temperatures increase by approximately 100 K. Active-period winds were poorly modelled by HWM93 and CTIP, although observed median temperatures were in better agreement with NRLMSISE-00 during such periods. Average behavior was found to be generally consistent with previous studies of thermospheric winds above Mawson. The collected data set was representative of quiet geomagnetic and solar conditions. Geographic eastward winds in the afternoon/evening generally continued until around local midnight, when winds turned equatorward. Geographic meridional and zonal winds in the afternoon were approximately 50 ms−1 weaker than expected from HWM93, as was the transition to equatorward flow around midnight. There was also a negligible geographic zonal component to the post-midnight wind where HWM93 predicted strong westward flow. Average temperatures between 19:00 and 04:00 local solar time were around 60 K higher than predicted by NRLMSISE-00.

Highlights

  • Large-scale thermospheric F-region winds are driven predominantly by the pressure gradient which results from solar heating on the dayside, and momentum transfer from ions convecting in the E×B direction due to electric fields mapped down from the magnetosphere

  • Average time-series of wind components and temperature are shown, for observations made under all conditions, and comparisons with HWM93 and NRLMSISE-00 are made

  • Both models predicted a similar trend in the zonal wind, which was in poor agreement with observation

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Summary

Introduction

Large-scale thermospheric F-region winds are driven predominantly by the pressure gradient which results from solar heating on the dayside, and momentum transfer from ions convecting in the E×B direction due to electric fields mapped down from the magnetosphere. These driving forces tend to reinforce each other over the poles, forcing the neutral wind in the antisunward direction, while at auroral latitudes the return (sunward) flow of ions tries to set up a two-cell circulation of the neutral wind (Thayer and Killeen, 1993). The 630.0 nm line of atomic oxygen was observed, yielding estimates of conditions in the auroral F-region at a typical height of approximately 240 km This instrument used a periscope to observe patches of the sky subtending around 1◦ fullangle.

Instrument description
Data analysis
Offset correction
Empirical and numerical models
Results
Daily variability
Average daily behavior
Conclusions
Full Text
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