SM41C-2491
IMPACTS OF GEOMAGNETIC STORMS ON THE TERRESTRIAL H-EXOSPHERE USING TWINS-LYMAN-ALPHA STEREO DATA

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Jochen Zoennchen1, Uwe Nass1, Hans Joerg Fahr2 and Jerry Goldstein3, (1)Argelander Institute for Astronomy, Bonn, Germany, (2)University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany, (3)Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, TX, United States
Abstract:
Based on continuously monitored Lyman-alpha data registered by the TWINS1/2-LAD instruments we have studied the impact of a weaker and a stronger geomagnetic storm on the exospheric H-density distribution between heights of 3--8 Earth-radii. As is well known, solar Lyman-alpha radiation is resonantly backscattered from geocoronal neutral hydrogen (H). The resulting resonance glow intensity in the optically thin regime is proportional to H column density along the line of sight (LOS). Here we present the terrestrial exospheric response to geomagnetic storms. We quantify the reaction to geomagnetic activity in form of amplitude and temporal response of the H-density, sampled at different geocentric distances. We find that even in case of a weak storm, the exospheric H-density in regions above the exobase reacts with a suprisingly large increase in a remarkably short time period of less than half a day. Careful analysis of this geomagnetic density effect indicates that it is an expansion in the radial scale height of the exospheric H-density, developing from exobasic heights.