Other
Scientific paper
Jan 1987
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1987jgr....92..225b&link_type=abstract
Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227), vol. 92, Jan. 1, 1987, p. 225-238.
Other
16
Atmospheric Composition, Daytime, Deuterium, Ion Density (Concentration), Thermosphere, Annual Variations, Explorer 51 Satellite, Mass Spectroscopy, Satellite-Borne Instruments, Vertical Distribution
Scientific paper
Ion concentration measurements for H(+) and D(+) from the magnetic ion mass spectrometer on the Atmosphere Explorer C satellite are used, in conjunction with other atmospheric data, to determine the concentrations of H and D in the nonpolar daytime thermosphere. The ratio of the observed D(+) to H(+) concentrations has essentially the same height dependence in the 300 to 800-km region as expected for their neutral counterparts, even in the presence of ion temperature gradients and probable large vertical ion fluxes. Rapid charge exchange with atomic oxygen ensures that D/H is about equal to D(+)/H(+) at the lower altitudes where the derived D to H concentration ratio is a factor of about 6 larger than its sea level value, for an exospheric temperature of 930 K. This relative enhancement of deuterium arises from the fact that hydrogen more readily escapes the earth, and a large vertical gradient in the H concentration relative to its diffusive equilibrium value is necessary to drive this upward flux through the lower thermosphere. If these planetary losses of hydrogen are much greater than those associated with evaporative escape, as is the current view, then correspondingly larger deuterium loss rates are also likely in order that the thermospheric D/H ratio not increase well above the observed value. The absolute winter daytime concentration of deuterium at 300 km is found to be 210 + or - 50 atoms/cu cm.
Breig Edward L.
Hanson William B.
Sanatani S.
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