SA52A-08
The Dynamics of Helium and its Impact on the Upper Thermosphere

Friday, 18 December 2015: 12:05
2016 (Moscone West)
Eric K Sutton, Air Force Research Laboratory, Kirtland AFB, NM, United States
Abstract:
The TIE-GCM was recently augmented to include helium and argon, two approximately inert species that can be used as tracers of dynamics in the thermosphere. The former species is treated as a major species due to its large abundance near the upper boundary. The effects of exospheric transport are also included in order to simulate realistic seasonal and latitudinal helium distributions. The latter species is treated as a classical minor species, imparting absolutely no forces on the background atmosphere. In this study, we examine the interplay of the various dynamical terms – i.e. background circulation, molecular and Eddy diffusion – as they drive departures from the distributions that would be expected under assumptions of diffusive equilibrium. As this has implications on the formulation of all semi-empirical thermospheric models, we use this understanding to identify the conditions under which helium can significantly affect nowcasts and forecasts of neutral density.