Abstract

AbstractThermal equilibrium in planetary atmospheres occurs at altitudes where the ion, electron, and neutral temperatures are equal. Thermal equilibrium is postulated to occur in the collision‐dominated ionosphere. This postulated altitude is above the lower boundary of all empirical models of planetary ionospheres. Physics‐based model predictions of the altitude cannot be validated due to a lack of adequate simultaneous observations of temperature profiles. This study presents temperature profiles from simultaneous observations on Atmosphere Explorer–C below 140 km and quiet‐time neutral observations from Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energy and Dynamics/Global UltraViolet Imager over Millstone Hill. These are compared with profiles from physics‐based models with a discussion of their respective limitations. We conclude that there does not yet exist a quantitative understanding of the ion, electron, and neutral thermalization processes in low‐altitude planetary ionospheres. Progress on this topic requires an adequate database of simultaneous ion, electron, and neutral temperature profiles in the 110–140 km altitude range.

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