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Variability of thermosphere and ionosphere responses to solar flares

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TLDR
In this article, the authors investigated how the rise rate and decay rate of solar flares affect the thermosphere and ionosphere responses to them, and they conducted model simulations and data analysis for two flares of similar magnitude (X6.2 and X5.4).
Abstract
We investigated how the rise rate and decay rate of solar flares affect the thermosphere and ionosphere responses to them. Model simulations and data analysis were conducted for two flares of similar magnitude (X6.2 and X5.4) that had the same location on the solar limb, but the X6.2 flare had longer rise and decay times. Simulated total electron content (TEC) enhancements from the X6.2 and X5.4 flares were 6 total electron content units (TECU) and approximately 2 TECU, and the simulated neutral density enhancements were approximately 15% -20% and approximately 5%, respectively, in reasonable agreement with observations. Additional model simulations showed that for idealized flares with the same magnitude and location, the thermosphere and ionosphere responses changed significantly as a function of rise and decay rates. The Neupert Effect, which predicts that a faster flare rise rate leads to a larger EUV enhancement during the impulsive phase, caused a larger maximum ion production enhancement. In addition, model simulations showed that increased E x B plasma transport due to conductivity increases during the flares caused a significant equatorial anomaly feature in the electron density enhancement in the F region but a relatively weaker equatorial anomaly feature in TEC enhancement, owing to dominant contributions by photochemical production and loss processes. The latitude dependence of the thermosphere response correlated well with the solar zenith angle effect, whereas the latitude dependence of the ionosphere response was more complex, owing to plasma transport and the winter anomaly.

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Heterogeneous photochemistry in the atmosphere.

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Temporal and spatial variability of urban heat island and thermal comfort within the Rotterdam agglomeration

TL;DR: In this article, the temporal and spatial variability of local climate and outdoor human thermal comfort within the Rotterdam agglomeration is investigated. But the authors focus on the atmospheric urban heat island (UHI); the difference in air temperature between urban areas and rural surroundings, and calculate the Physiologically Equivalent Temperature (PET), a measure of thermal comfort.
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Thermospheric mass density: A review

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Maintaining high rates of carbon storage in old forests: A mechanism linking canopy structure to forest function

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the fraction of photosynthetically active radiation absorbed by the canopy (fAPAR), foliar Nmass, and aboveground net primary production (ANPP) in 39 passively managed stands spanning >160 years of forest development in Northern Lower Michigan, USA.
References
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Book

Nrlmsise-00 Empirical Model of the Atmosphere: Statistical Comparisons and Scientific Issues

TL;DR: The new NRLMSISE-00 model and the associated NRLMSIS database now include the following data: (1) total mass density from satellite accelerometers and from orbit determination, including the Jacchia and Barlier data; (2) temperature from incoherent scatter radar, and; (3) molecular oxygen number density, [O2], from solar ultraviolet occultation aboard the Solar Maximum Mission (SMM).
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A thermosphere/ionosphere general circulation model with coupled electrodynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, a new simulation model of upper atmospheric dynamics is presented that includes self-consistent electrodynamic interactions between the thermosphere and ionosphere and uses the resultant electric fields and currents in calculating the neutral and plasma dynamics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Migrating and nonmigrating diurnal tides in the middle and upper atmosphere excited by tropospheric latent heat release

TL;DR: In this paper, the global scale wave model (GSWM) is used to investigate mesospheric and lower thermospheric migrating and non-migrating diurnal tidal components that propagate upward from the troposphere, where they are excited by latent heat release associated with deep tropical convection.
Journal ArticleDOI

A coupled thermosphere/ionosphere general circulation model

TL;DR: In this paper, the NCAR TGCM was extended to include a self-consistent aeronomic scheme of the thermosphere and ionosphere and the model now calculates total temperature, instead of perturbation temperature about some specified global mean, global distributions of N(µD), N(4S) and NO, and a global ionosphere with distributions of O+,NO+, O2+, N2+ N2+, n+, electron density, and ion temperature as well as the usual fields of winds, temperature and major composition.
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