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Plasma-neutral interactions in the lower thermosphere-ionosphere : The need for in situ measurements to address focused questions

Authors :
Sarris, Theodoros
Palmroth, Minna
Aikio, Anita
Buchert, Stephan Christoph
Clemmons, James
Clilverd, Mark
Dandouras, Iannis
Doornbos, Eelco
Goodwin, Lindsay Victoria
Grandin, Maxime
Heelis, Roderick
Ivchenko, Nickolay
Moretto-Jørgensen, Therese
Kervalishvili, Guram
Knudsen, David
Liu, Han-Li
Lu, Gang
Malaspina, David M.
Marghitu, Octav
Maute, Astrid
Miloch, Wojciech J.
Olsen, Nils
Pfaff, Robert
Stolle, Claudia
Talaat, Elsayed
Thayer, Jeffrey
Tourgaidis, Stelios
Verronen, Pekka T.
Yamauchi, Masatoshi
Sarris, Theodoros
Palmroth, Minna
Aikio, Anita
Buchert, Stephan Christoph
Clemmons, James
Clilverd, Mark
Dandouras, Iannis
Doornbos, Eelco
Goodwin, Lindsay Victoria
Grandin, Maxime
Heelis, Roderick
Ivchenko, Nickolay
Moretto-Jørgensen, Therese
Kervalishvili, Guram
Knudsen, David
Liu, Han-Li
Lu, Gang
Malaspina, David M.
Marghitu, Octav
Maute, Astrid
Miloch, Wojciech J.
Olsen, Nils
Pfaff, Robert
Stolle, Claudia
Talaat, Elsayed
Thayer, Jeffrey
Tourgaidis, Stelios
Verronen, Pekka T.
Yamauchi, Masatoshi
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The lower thermosphere-ionosphere (LTI) is a key transition region between Earth’s atmosphere and space. Interactions between ions and neutrals maximize within the LTI and in particular at altitudes from 100 to 200 km, which is the least visited region of the near-Earth environment. The lack of in situ co-temporal and co-spatial measurements of all relevant parameters and their elusiveness to most remote-sensing methods means that the complex interactions between its neutral and charged constituents remain poorly characterized to this date. This lack of measurements, together with the ambiguity in the quantification of key processes in the 100–200 km altitude range affect current modeling efforts to expand atmospheric models upward to include the LTI and limit current space weather prediction capabilities. We present focused questions in the LTI that are related to the complex interactions between its neutral and charged constituents. These questions concern core physical processes that govern the energetics, dynamics, and chemistry of the LTI and need to be addressed as fundamental and long-standing questions in this critically unexplored boundary region. We also outline the range of in situ measurements that are needed to unambiguously quantify key LTI processes within this region, and present elements of an in situ concept based on past proposed mission concepts.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1387042673
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389.fspas.2022.1063190