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Oceanography and Atmospheric Sci.Atmospheric Physics

Thermospheric Space Weather Modeling

Authors: Frank A. Marcos; William J. Burke; Shu T. Lai; AIR FORCE RESEARCH LAB HANSCOM AFB MA SPACE VEHICLES DIRECTORATE
 
Abstract: We review impacts of satellite drag and describe past, current and future capabilities designed to meet evolving operational requirements. Historically, thermospheric research has been data starved. Thus, from the early space age to the end of the 20th century little progress was made in satellite-drag modeling. This condition improved greatly with the development of empirical assimilative models and recent availability of comprehensive drag measurements. With the new Jacchia-Bowman 2006 model the status of empirical modeling improved significantly. It builds on the expanded satellite drag database and incorporates improved estimates of solar flux changes as well as semi-annual and local time variations of the thermosphere. However, magnetic storm representations of Jacchia-Bowman 2006 are similar to those used in other current models. Satellite-borne accelerometers and optical sensors now provide complementary spatial and temporal capabilities that permit monitoring of the thermosphere over a wide range of altitudes under most solar and geomagnetic conditions. Long-standing shortfalls during periods of high geomagnetic activity are now being attacked with these data and through new analyses of solar wind and IMF measurements, correlations with magnetosphere-based magnetic indices and emerging theoretical tools. These advances in understanding thermospheric coupling during magnetic storms will be incorporated into empirical model upgrades. The analyses of new data sets joined with on-going research on physical thermosphere-ionosphere-magnetosphere coupling processes support the pursuit of our ultimate goal, an assimilative and predictive operational model of thermospheric neutral densities.

Limitations: APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
Description: Conference paper
Pages: 13
Report Date: JUN 2007
Report Number: A744174
Keywords relating to this report:
*ARTIFICIAL SATELLITES
*ATMOSPHERIC DENSITY
*MAGNETIC STORMS
*MODELS
*THERMOSPHERE
AERODYNAMIC DRAG
ASSIMILATION
GEOMAGNETISM
ORBITS
REPRINTS
SYMPOSIA
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