The Stratosphere‐Ionosphere‐Protonosphere Coupling: Evidence From the Ion Composition Observations During the 2009 Sudden Stratospheric Warming

Author:

Zhang Ruilong123ORCID,Liu Libo123ORCID,Chen Yiding134ORCID,Le Huijun123ORCID,Li Wenbo13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Earth and Planetary Physics Institute of Geology and Geophysics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

2. Heilongjiang Mohe Observatory of Geophysics Institute of Geology and Geophysics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

3. College of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. Beijing National Observatory of Space Environment Institute of Geology and Geophysics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractPrevious studies suggested that sudden stratospheric warmings (SSW) change the global atmosphere from troposphere to thermosphere/ionosphere. We report the low‐latitude O+ and H+ composition at 840‐km altitude during the 2009 SSW, with the DMSP satellite morning measurements. Our results indicate that the stratospheric variation around 30‐km altitude modulates the ion exchange between the ionosphere and protonosphere via the vertical and field‐aligned plasma drifts due to the enhanced lunar semidiurnal tides. The upward disturbance drift uplifts the ionospheric O+ into the protonosphere, and most O+ is changed to H+ via chemical coupling, while the O+/H+ transition height does not change under combined effects of the southward and upward disturbance drifts on 24–29 January. The disturbance drift turns downward, lowers the O+/H+ transition height, depletes the O+ density in the protonosphere, and the H+ at higher altitudes moves downward to supply the H+ at 840 km from 30 January to 5 February.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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