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Climatology of Thermospheric Winds over the Southern Polar Cap from JBS-FPI Observations

  • Eunsol Kim
  • , Changsup Lee
  • , Young Bae Ham
  • , Yujin Cho
  • , Geonhwa Jee
  • , Qian Wu
  • Korea Polar Research Institute
  • University of Science and Technology UST
  • National Center for Atmospheric Research

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study presents the results from a climatological analysis of thermospheric winds (~ 250 km altitude) in the southern polar cap, based on the first long-sterm ground-based Fabry–Perot Interferometer (FPI) observations at Jang Bogo station (JBS; 80°S geomagnetic latitude), Antarctica, during 2014 − 2022. The winds exhibit pronounced diurnal variations, characterized by persistent anti-sunward flow across all magnetic local time sectors with a slight duskward tilt, primarily driven by ion drag in combination with day-to-night pressure gradients. The seasonal and solar activity dependencies show enhanced wind magnitudes during equinoxes and under high solar activity, likely reflecting stronger ion drag from increased ionospheric densities. The wind patterns are further modulated by increasing geomagnetic activity, which intensifies wind speeds and enhances the duskward tilts, associated with the strengthening of the dusk-side ionospheric convection cell. The orientation of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) also influences wind behaviors: a negative IMF Bz component increases wind magnitudes, while the IMF By component induces directional asymmetry by modulating ionospheric convection. These results offer new ground-based constraints on thermospheric wind circulation in the southern polar cap and its possible mechanisms over nearly a solar cycle.

Original languageEnglish
Article number48
JournalEarth, Planets and Space
Volume78
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Ion drag
  • Jang Bogo Station Fabry–Perot Interferometer (JBS-FPI)
  • Magnetosphere–Ionosphere–Thermosphere coupling
  • Southern polar cap
  • Thermospheric wind

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