Mesospheric nightglow spectral survey taken by the ISO Spectral Spatial Imager on ATLAS 1

This paper reports the first comprehensive spectral survey of the mesospheric airglow between 260 and 832 nm taken by the Imaging Spectrometric Observatory on the ATLAS 1 mission. We select data taken in the spectral window between 275 and 300 nm to determine the variation with altitude of the Herzb...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geophysical research letters 1993-03, Vol.20 (6), p.515-518
Hauptverfasser: Owens, J. K., Torr, D. G., Torr, M. R., Chang, T., Fennelly, J. A., Richards, P. G., Morgan, M. F., Baldridge, T. W., Fellows, C. W., Dougani, H., Swift, W., Tejada, A., Orme, T., Germany, G. A., Yung, S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper reports the first comprehensive spectral survey of the mesospheric airglow between 260 and 832 nm taken by the Imaging Spectrometric Observatory on the ATLAS 1 mission. We select data taken in the spectral window between 275 and 300 nm to determine the variation with altitude of the Herzberg I bands originating from the vibrational levels v-prime = 3 to 8. These data provide the first spatially resolved spectral measurements of the system. The data are used to demonstrate that to within an uncertainty of +/- 10 percent, the vibrational distribution remains invariant with altitude. The deficit reported previously for the v-prime = 5 level is not observed although there is a suggestion of depletion in v-prime = 6. The data could be used to place tight constraints on the vibrational dependence of quenching rate coefficients, and on the abundance of atomic oxygen.
ISSN:0094-8276
1944-8007
DOI:10.1029/93GL00616