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Thermosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model
Author(s) -
Liu H.L.,
Foster B. T.,
Hagan M. E.,
McInerney J. M.,
Maute A.,
Qian L.,
Richmond A. D.,
Roble R. G.,
Solomon S. C.,
Garcia R. R.,
Kinnison D.,
Marsh D. R.,
Smith A. K.,
Richter J.,
Sassi F.,
Oberheide J.
Publication year - 2010
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 - 10.1029/2010ja015586
Subject(s) - thermosphere , atmosphere (unit) , climate model , atmospheric sciences , atmospheric model , atmospheric chemistry , environmental science , troposphere , climatology , meteorology , climate change , ionosphere , physics , geology , geophysics , ozone , oceanography
In atmospheric and space environment studies it is key to understand and to quantify the coupling of atmospheric regions and the solar impacts on the whole atmosphere system. There is thus a need for a numerical model that encompasses the whole atmosphere and can self‐consistently simulate the dynamic, physical, chemical, radiative, and electrodynamic processes that are important for the Sun‐Earth system. This is the goal for developing the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM). In this work, we report the development and preliminary validation of the thermospheric extension of WACCM (WACCM‐X), which extends from the Earth's surface to the upper thermosphere. The WACCM‐X uses the finite volume dynamical core from the NCAR Community Atmosphere Model and includes an interactive chemistry module resolving most known neutral chemistry and major ion chemistry in the middle and upper atmosphere, and photolysis and photoionization. Upper atmosphere processes, such as nonlocal thermodynamic equilibrium, radiative transfer, auroral processes, ion drag, and molecular diffusion of major and minor species, have been included in the model. We evaluate the model performance by examining the quantities essential for the climate and weather of the upper atmosphere: the mean compositional, thermal, and wind structures from the troposphere to the upper thermosphere and their variability on interannual, seasonal, and daily scales. These quantities are compared with observational and previous model results.

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