TY - JOUR
T1 - Multiinstrument Studies of Thermospheric Weather Above Alaska
AU - Conde, M. G.
AU - Bristow, W. A.
AU - Hampton, D. L.
AU - Elliott, J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Scanning Doppler Imager instruments used in this work were supported by National Science Foundation awards AGS-1140075 and AGS-1452333. SuperDARN radar operations were supported by NSF award AGS-1341902. The Poker Flat Incoherent Scatter Radar (PFISR) is operated by SRI International on behalf of the U.S. National Science Foundation under NSF cooperative agreement AGS-1133009, which also funded operation of ground-based cameras in Alaska. Wind observations from Gakona were made possible by the Space Physics and Atmospheric Research Center of the U.S. Air Force Academy, through the support of Geoff McHarg, who is the principal investigator for the SDI instrument that operated there. We thank Larry Paxton of John's Hopkins University for providing online access to the DMSP-SSUSI image data. The Editor thanks Anasuya Aruliah and one anonymous reviewer for their assistance in evaluating this paper. Observational data and code used in this article are available online from the zenodo scientific data archive https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1435243. SDI data and the software used for reading them are also available online from our server at http://sdi_server.gi.alaska.edu/sdiweb/index.asp.
Funding Information:
Scanning Doppler Imager instruments used in this work were supported by National Science Foundation awards AGS-1140075 and AGS-1452333. SuperDARN radar operations were supported by NSF award AGS-1341902. The Poker Flat Incoherent Scatter Radar (PFISR) is operated by SRI International on behalf of the U.S. National Science Foundation under NSF cooperative agreement AGS-1133009, which also funded operation of ground-based cameras in Alaska. Wind observations from Gakona were made possible by the Space Physics and Atmospheric Research Center of the U.S. Air Force Academy, through the support of Geoff McHarg, who is the principal investigator for the SDI instrument that operated there. We thank Larry Paxton of John’s Hopkins University for providing online access to the DMSP-SSUSI image data. The Editor thanks Anasuya Aruliah and one anonymous reviewer for their assistance in evaluating this paper. Observational data and code used in this article are available online from the zenodo scientific data archive https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1435243. SDI data and the software used for reading them are also available online from our server at http://sdi_server.gi. alaska.edu/sdiweb/index.asp.
Publisher Copyright:
©2018. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - We describe how space weather impacts thermospheric winds above Alaska, using an array of ground and space-based instrumentation. Forcing of the thermosphere is observed using coherent (Super Dual Auroral Radar Network) and incoherent (Poker Flat Incoherent Scatter Radar) radars to measure ion convection, plus ground and space-based imagers to map auroral precipitation. The primary emphasis in this work is to determine the neutral thermospheric wind response at F region heights to these drivers, using an array of ground-based all-sky imaging Fabry-Perot spectrometers that record Doppler spectra of optical emissions at 630-nm wavelength, originating from a height of around 240 km. Line-of-sight winds are derived from Doppler shifts and, because each instrument only directly measures this one component, considerable postprocessing must be applied to infer the full three-component vector velocity field. Several techniques for doing so are identified, and a detailed description is presented of the hybrid algorithm used here. Results show that thermospheric winds at these latitudes respond strongly to magnetospheric drivers associated with the aurora over length scales down 100 km or less, and on time scales as short as 15 min. These scales are considerably smaller than those resolved by previous observations, or those captured in semiempirical models such as the Horizontal Wind Model or global-scale first principle models such as the Thermospheric Global Circulation Model and its relatives. Divergence and vorticity commonly occur in the observed horizontal wind fields, over regions spanning hundred of kilometers across and with magnitudes exceeding 0.5 × 10−3 s−1.
AB - We describe how space weather impacts thermospheric winds above Alaska, using an array of ground and space-based instrumentation. Forcing of the thermosphere is observed using coherent (Super Dual Auroral Radar Network) and incoherent (Poker Flat Incoherent Scatter Radar) radars to measure ion convection, plus ground and space-based imagers to map auroral precipitation. The primary emphasis in this work is to determine the neutral thermospheric wind response at F region heights to these drivers, using an array of ground-based all-sky imaging Fabry-Perot spectrometers that record Doppler spectra of optical emissions at 630-nm wavelength, originating from a height of around 240 km. Line-of-sight winds are derived from Doppler shifts and, because each instrument only directly measures this one component, considerable postprocessing must be applied to infer the full three-component vector velocity field. Several techniques for doing so are identified, and a detailed description is presented of the hybrid algorithm used here. Results show that thermospheric winds at these latitudes respond strongly to magnetospheric drivers associated with the aurora over length scales down 100 km or less, and on time scales as short as 15 min. These scales are considerably smaller than those resolved by previous observations, or those captured in semiempirical models such as the Horizontal Wind Model or global-scale first principle models such as the Thermospheric Global Circulation Model and its relatives. Divergence and vorticity commonly occur in the observed horizontal wind fields, over regions spanning hundred of kilometers across and with magnitudes exceeding 0.5 × 10−3 s−1.
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U2 - 10.1029/2018JA025806
DO - 10.1029/2018JA025806
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85057090354
SN - 2169-9380
VL - 123
SP - 9836
EP - 9861
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
IS - 11
ER -