The Atmospheric Waves Experiment (AWE)

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

NASA’s Atmospheric Waves Experiment (AWE) mission is a Heliophysics Small Explorers Mission of Opportunity designed to investigate how terrestrial weather affects space weather, via small-scale atmospheric gravity waves (AGWs) produced in Earth’s atmosphere. Following its launch to the International Space Station (ISS) in November 2023, AWE began a 2-year mission to explore the global distribution of AGWs, study the processes controlling their propagation throughout the upper atmosphere, and estimate their impacts on the ionosphere – thermosphere – mesosphere (ITM) system. The AWE science instrument consists of the Advanced Mesospheric Temperature Mapper (AMTM) — a wide field-of-view Shortwave Infrared (SWIR) imager that quantifies gravity wave-induced temperature disturbances in the hydroxyl (OH) airglow layer, which lies near the mesopause at ~87 km altitude. The AMTM’s four identical telescopes make continuous nighttime observations of the P1(2) and P1(4) emission lines of the OH (3,1) band and the Q1(1) emission line in the OH (2,0) band, as well as the atmospheric background, from which the OH layer temperature is derived. AWE images are collected once per second, co-added, and processed into temperature swaths using correction algorithms derived from ground calibration test results. Global coverage of the OH layer is provided about every four days, which enables regional and seasonal studies, as well as characterization of AGW ‘hot spots.’ This presentation will present an overview of the AWE mission, including science objectives, measurement technique, and a brief look at initial science results.

Presenters

  • Ludger Scherliess

    Utah State University

Authors

  • Ludger Scherliess

    Utah State University

  • Michael J Taylor

    Utah State Center for Space and Atmospheric Sciences, Utah State University

  • Dominique Pautet

    Utah State University

  • Yucheng Zhao

    Utah State University

  • Burt Lamborn

    Space Dynamics Laboratory

  • harri Latvakoski

    Space Dynamics Laboratory

  • Greg Cantwell

    Space Dynamics Laboratory

  • Pedro Sevilla

    Space Dynamics Laboratory

  • Erik Syrstad

    Space dynamics Laboratory

  • Jeff Forbes

    University of Colorado

  • Steve Eckermann

    Naval Research Lab

  • Dave Fritts

    GATS

  • Diego Janches

    Goddard Space Flight Center

  • Hanli Liu

    National Center for Atmospheric Research

  • Jonathan Snively

    Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University