modelling the thermosphere-ionosphere response to space weather effects: the problem with the inputs...

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Modelling the Thermosphere- Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric Physics Laboratory University College London

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Page 1: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs

Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga

Atmospheric Physics Laboratory

University College London

Page 2: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

Using Global Circulation Models as a Forecasting Tool:

• First you need to develop a global model of the upper atmosphere• Then you need to drive it by external inputs in a realistic way• If the physics is right it should simulate the “real” atmosphere and any

transmitted effects• From this grew the idea of forecasting - or at least “nowcasting”. Can

you input data from, say, a solar wind monitor and predict the ionospheric response?

• This takes “Space Weather” into the realm of “Space Weather Forecasting” with many of its concomitant conditions

• We enter the world of data assimilation: the inputs define our accuracy

Page 3: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

CTIP/CTIM Properties

• 3-dimensional, time-dependent

• Solves equations of momentum, energy and continuity for ions and neutrals

• 80-500km thermosphere, 110-10,000km for the ionosphere and plasmasphere

• Resolution 2 degs latitude, 18 degrees longitude by 1 scale height altitude. 30-60 seconds time resolution

• 3 neutral constituents (O, O2, N2) and 2 ions (H+, O+)

• Wave forcing at the lower boundary(80km)

• Self-consistent dynamo calculations

Page 4: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric
Page 5: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

“Standard” input of magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling

• An empirical model of high-latitude convection gives the polar cap electric field pattern.

• Many exist - Heppner and Maynard, Foster, Weimar, Heelis, Rich and Maynard

• We use magnetospheric inputs based on statistical models of auroral precipitation and electric fields from Tiros and Foster (Fuller-Rowell

1987 and Foster 1986).

• These inputs are linked to a power index based on TIROS/NOAA auroral particle measurements.

Page 6: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric
Page 7: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

Coupled Thermosphere Ionosphere Plasmasphere model (CTIP)

Atmospheric temperature changes due to dynamic Auroral forcing

(i.e., Magnetic Storm)

Global gravity wave propagation

green/red +20K, blue -20K

QuickTime™ and aCinepak decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 8: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

April 1997 Storm event

Dusk effect (neutral winds)

TEC enhancement (particle precipitation)

Total Electron Content (TEC) change

Negative phase (neutral gas composition)

But complications continually arise: the response to storms is not simple:

Page 9: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

But how realistic are the inputs?

Page 10: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

SuperDARNSuper Dual Auroral Radar Network

Northern Hemisphere

Southern Hemisphere

Page 11: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

Joule heating from CTIP model runs

Empirical electric fields

Electric field input derived from

SuperDARN

Page 12: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

QuickTime™ and aPNG decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 13: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

QuickTime™ and aPNG decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 14: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

So what else is needed?

• We can input SUPERDARN fields at 2 minutes resolution

• But there is a precipitation pattern on top of this• Where can we get that from? Getting matched

precipitation and electric field has long beena problem for GCMs

Page 15: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

OVATION datasets (http://sd-www.jhuapl.edu/Aurora/ovation/datasets.html)

OVATION model

Predicts location of auroral oval and maps magnetospheric boundaries onto the ionosphere

Uses:

a) DMSP satellite particle data

b) SuperDARN convection patterns

c) All-sky imaging camera

Page 16: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

• However even given these we still need a dense network of stations to constrain the empirical inputs

Page 17: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric
Page 18: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

MIRACLE:

Magnetometers, Ionospheric Radars, All-sky Cameras Large Experiment

Combined ASC images from Kilpisjarvi and Muonio showing

an auroral arc, projected at 110km altitude.

Kurihara et al., Annales, 2006

Page 19: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

Experience from US studies:

• A supposedly “operational” nowcasting system has been delivered to the US Air Force using GPS inputs assimilated into an ionosphere model

• However this is without a self-consistent thermosphere• Contrast the density of TEC/Ne measurements with those

of neutral atmosphere composition and winds• The northern US continent is well covered but even for

electron density/TEC coverage outside this is poor. • Does this matter??

Page 20: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

Global model of Joule heating for moderate conditions (Thayer, 1995)

Including neutral wind dynamo

No neutral wind dynamo Un=0

Page 21: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

The Auroral zone inputs are not the only problem

• The equatorial ionosphere is notoriously difficult to model

• Its scale sizes do not match easily with GCMs• It is part of a general problem that there are

aspects of modelling the ionospheric/thermospheric behaviour which can only be solved globally

• …..And you can’t ignore the lower atmosphere

Page 22: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric
Page 23: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

V = E x B (20 - 40 m/s)

Page 24: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric
Page 25: Modelling the Thermosphere-Ionosphere Response to Space Weather Effects: the Problem with the Inputs Alan Aylward, George Millward, Alex Lotinga Atmospheric

Conclusions

• On the whole we know the physics, much as we do with tropospheric meteorology

• The problem with taking this to “nowcasting” and forecasting is with resolution and inputs

• Whereas some data might be available at a high enough resolution (electron densities) it is unlikely we will ever get neutral atmosphere data at the same density

• “Average” and low resolution behaviour we can simulate well already, but “local” forecasts or specific features is not what you should expect from GCMs