
Comparison of a Neutral Density Model With the SET HASDM Density Database
Author(s) -
Weimer Daniel R.,
Tobiska W. Kent,
Mehta Piyush M.,
Licata R. J.,
Drob Douglas P.,
Yoshii Jean
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
space weather
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.254
H-Index - 56
ISSN - 1542-7390
DOI - 10.1029/2021sw002888
Subject(s) - thermosphere , local time , altitude (triangle) , longitude , satellite , atmospheric sciences , defense meteorological satellite program , latitude , ionosphere , earth's magnetic field , environmental science , ranging , atmospheric models , meteorology , computational physics , physics , atmosphere (unit) , geodesy , geophysics , statistics , geology , mathematics , astronomy , geometry , quantum mechanics , magnetic field
The EXospheric TEMperatures on a PoLyhedrAl gRid (EXTEMPLAR) method predicts the neutral densities in the thermosphere. The performance of this model has been evaluated through a comparison with the Air Force High Accuracy Satellite Drag Model (HASDM). The Space Environment Technologies (SET) HASDM database that was used for this test spans the 20 years 2000 through 2019, containing densities at 3 hr time intervals at 25 km altitude steps, and a spatial resolution of 10° latitude by 15° longitude. The upgraded EXTEMPLAR that was tested uses the newer Naval Research Laboratory MSIS 2.0 model to convert global exospheric temperature values to neutral density as a function of altitude. The revision also incorporated time delays that varied as a function of location, between the total Poynting flux in the polar regions and the exospheric temperature response. The density values from both models were integrated on spherical shells at altitudes ranging from 200 to 800 km. These sums were compared as a function of time. The results show an excellent agreement at temporal scales ranging from hours to years. The EXTEMPLAR model performs best at altitudes of 400 km and above, where geomagnetic storms produce the largest relative changes in neutral density. In addition to providing an effective method to compare models that have very different spatial resolutions, the use of density totals at various altitudes presents a useful illustration of how the thermosphere behaves at different altitudes, on time scales ranging from hours to complete solar cycles.