Thermospheric Composition O/N 2 Response to an Altered Meridional Mean Circulation During Sudden Stratospheric Warmings Observed by GOLD

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Abstract

Observations from the recently launched Global-Scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) instrument on the geostationary SES-14 communications satellite reveal a substantial response of the mean state of the thermosphere to the Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) event in early January 2019. The observed O/N2 column density depletion of more than 10% starts at the onset of the SSW, maximizes at the time of the stratospheric wind reversal, and recovers toward the end of the SSW. A connection between SSW and thermospheric composition was previously predicted by model simulations but could not be observed before. The GOLD measurements support the scenario that enhanced global-scale wave activity during SSWs causes an enhanced wave driving of the lower thermosphere zonal mean circulation that leads to a reduction in lower thermosphere atomic oxygen, which then propagates through molecular diffusion into the upper thermosphere.

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Oberheide, J., Pedatella, N. M., Gan, Q., Kumari, K., Burns, A. G., & Eastes, R. W. (2020). Thermospheric Composition O/N 2 Response to an Altered Meridional Mean Circulation During Sudden Stratospheric Warmings Observed by GOLD. Geophysical Research Letters, 47(1). https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL086313

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