PSJC #39 Apr 8 2009
Richard Eastes
The *Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) Mission*
Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) is a proposed
Mission of Opportunity to perform remote-sensing measurements of the
Earth's thermosphere and ionosphere, using an ultraviolet imaging
spectrograph on board a commercial, geosynchronous satellite. The goal
of the mission is to provide answers to key elements of an overarching
question for Heliophysics science: what is the global-scale response of
the thermosphere and ionosphere to forcing in the integrated Sun-Earth
system? GOLD will advance our understanding of Thermosphere-Ionosphere
forcing by providing neutral densities and temperatures in the
thermosphere as well as densities in the nighttime ionosphere. The
Thermosphere-Ionosphere region is one in which there is a transition
between a plasma dominated regime and a neutral, fluid dominated
atmosphere. It is also primarily externally forced rather than being
forced by internal processes. The relative importance of this forcing
varies by geographic location and height, so the impact of this forcing
must be understood on a global rather than a local scale. GOLD will
provide the first large-scale "snapshot" of temperature that can be
compared with a simultaneous "snapshot" of composition changes to
understand how these two major parameters simultaneously react to this
these various forcing mechanisms. The relationship between universal
time, local time and longitudinal changes in these key parameters can
be unambiguously separated by the GOLD observations to enable us to
address these interactions. GOLD will resolve some of the important
issues related to how the forcing drives this transition region and
the interaction between these parameters by addressing four key science
questions which are subsets of this overarching problem:
1. How do geomagnetic storms alter the temperature and composition
structure of the thermosphere; how does the low-latitude, nighttime
ionosphere respond to geomagnetic storms; and is the initial state of
the thermosphere-ionosphere system a key determinant of geomagnetic
storm effects?
2. What is the global-scale response of the thermosphere to solar
extreme-ultraviolet variability?
3. Do atmospheric waves and tides have a significant effect on
thermospheric temperature structure?
4. Do vertical ion drifts, as manifested in the structure of the
equatorial anomaly, affect the occurrence of ionospheric irregularities?