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Understanding the role of exospheric density in the ring current recovery rate
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  • Gonzalo Cucho-Padin,
  • Cristian Ferradas,
  • Lara Waldrop,
  • Mei-Ching Fok
Gonzalo Cucho-Padin
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Cristian Ferradas
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
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Lara Waldrop
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Mei-Ching Fok
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
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Abstract

Atomic Hydrogen (H) is the most abundant constituent of the terrestrial exosphere. Its charge exchange interaction with ring current ions (H+ and O+) serves to dissipate magnetospheric energy during geomagnetic storms, resulting in the generation of energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). Determination of ring current ion distributions through modeling depends critically on the specification of the exospheric H density distribution. Furthermore, theoretical studies have demonstrated that ring current recovery rate after the storm onset directly correlates with the H density. Although measurements of H airglow emission at altitudes [3,6] Re exhibit storm-time variations, the H density distributions used in ring current modeling are typically assumed to be temporally static during storms. In this presentation, we will describe the temporal and spatial evolution of ring current ion densities in response to a realistically dynamic exospheric H density distribution using the Comprehensive Inner Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Model (CIMI). The exospheric densities used as input to the model are fully data-driven, derived as global, 3D, and time-dependent tomographic reconstructions of H emission data acquired from Lyman-alpha detectors onboard the NASA TWINS satellites during the geomagnetic storm that occurred on March 17, 2013. We will examine modeled ring current recovery rates using both dynamic and static reconstructions and evaluate the impact of realistic storm-time exospheric variability on the simulations.