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Observations of Infrared Radiative Cooling in the Thermosphere on Daily to Multiyear Timescales from the TIMED/SABER Instrument

Authors :
Mlynczak, Martin G
Hunt, Linda A
Marshall, B. Thomas
Martin-Torres, F. Javier
Mertens, Christopher J
Russell, James M., III
Remsberg, Ellis E
Lopez-Puertas, Manuel
Picard, Richard
Winick, Jeremy
Wintersteiner, Peter
Thompson, R. Earl
Gordley, Larry L
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2009.

Abstract

We present observations of the infrared radiative cooling by carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitric oxide (NO) in Earth s thermosphere. These data have been taken over a period of 7 years by the SABER instrument on the NASA TIMED satellite and are the dominant radiative cooling mechanisms for the thermosphere. From the SABER observations we derive vertical profiles of radiative cooling rates (W/cu m), radiative fluxes (W/sq m), and radiated power (W). In the period from January 2002 through January 2009 we observe a large decrease in the cooling rates, fluxes, and power consistent with the declining phase of solar cycle. The power radiated by NO during 2008 when the Sun exhibited few sunspots was nearly one order of magnitude smaller than the peak power observed shortly after the mission began. Substantial short-term variability in the infrared emissions is also observed throughout the entire mission duration. Radiative cooling rates and radiative fluxes from NO exhibit fundamentally different latitude dependence than do those from CO2, with the NO fluxes and cooling rates being largest at high latitudes and polar regions. The cooling rates are shown to be derived relatively independent of the collisional and radiative processes that drive the departure from local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) in the CO2 15 m and the NO 5.3 m vibration-rotation bands. The observed NO and CO2 cooling rates have been compiled into a separate dataset and represent a climate data record that is available for use in assessments of radiative cooling in upper atmosphere general circulation models.

Subjects

Subjects :
Space Radiation

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
WBS 370544.04.12
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20100011897
Document Type :
Report