On the structure and circulation of the polar thermosphere under magnetically quiet conditions |
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Affiliation: | Laboratory for Atmospheres, Nasa/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | A theoretical study is presented bearing on the thermospheric circulation and composition at polar latitudes. The observed motions and density perturbations in N2, O and He have signatures which may be understood in terms of two different source mechanisms. We consider electric field momentum coupling and Joule heating as well as interactions between both processes. A spectral model in terms of vector spherical harmonics (with magnetic coordinates) is used, delineating the diurnal and mean (time independent) components. The important non-linearities are evaluated in configuration space. The electric field model of Volland and the global average density and temperature variations of Hedin (MSIS) are adopted as input. Our analysis leads to the following conclusions. (1) The vortex type double cell polar circulation (zonal wave number m = 1) is primarily driven by collisional momentum transfer from electric field induced ion convection. (2) Because of the thermospheric low pass filter, a large time independent component (zonal wave number m = 0) is produced by Joule heating; the heavier species (N2) being concentrated where the lighter ones (O, He) are depleted, and vice versa due to wind induced diffusion (3) The electric field driven vortex circulation redistributes the mass and energy in the time independent density and temperature variations (from Joule heating), producing primarily diurnal variations (m = 1) in the temperature and composition near the pole and at auroral latitudes, again the heavier and lighter species varying out of phase. The above results are in substantial agreement with observations. It is worth noting that momentum rectification associated with the diurnally varying electric field and conductivity induces a weak zonally symmetric (single cell) prograde polar vortex. However, this motion is partially compensated by a retrograde vortex from geostrophic balance due to Joule heating, which dominates near the pole. These motions are small compared with the diurnally varying component in the polar circulation. |
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