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Observed seasonal variations in exospheric effective temperatures
Author(s) -
Mierkiewicz E. J.,
Roesler F. L.,
Nossal S. M.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2011ja017123
Subject(s) - balmer series , thermosphere , exosphere , physics , atmospheric sciences , astrophysics , observatory , spectral line , line (geometry) , environmental science , emission spectrum , ionosphere , astronomy , ion , geometry , mathematics , quantum mechanics
High spectral resolution line profile observations indicate a reproducible semi‐annual variation in the geocoronal hydrogen Balmer α effective temperature. These observations were made between 08 January 2000 and 21 November 2001 from Pine Bluff Observatory (WI) with a second generation double etalon Fabry‐Perot annular summing spectrometer operating at a resolving power of 80,000. This data set spans sixty‐four nights of observations (1404 spectra in total) over 20 dark‐moon periods. A two cluster Gaussian model fitting procedure is used to determine Doppler line widths, accounting for fine structure contributions to the line, including those due to cascade; cascade contributions at Balmer α are found to be 5 ± 3%. An observed decrease in effective temperature with increasing shadow altitude is found to be a persistent feature for every night in which a wide range of shadow altitudes were sampled. A semiannual variation is observed in the column exospheric effective temperature with maxima near day numbers 100 and 300 and minima near day numbers 1 and 200. Temperatures ranged from ∼710 to 975 K. Average MSIS model exobase temperatures for similar conditions are approximately 1.5× higher than those derived from the Balmer α observations, a difference likely due to contributions to the observed Balmer α column emission from higher, cooler regions of the exosphere.

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