SAMI3 data in netCDF format (2019-Apr-24)
Description
SAMI3 (Sami3 is Also a Model of the Ionosphere) is a seamless, three-dimensional, physics-based model of the ionosphere (Huba et al, 2008). It is based on SAMI2, a two-dimensional model of the ionosphere (Huba et al., 2000).
SAMI3 models the plasma and chemical evolution of seven ion species (H⁺, He⁺, N⁺, O⁺, N⁺₂, NO⁺ and O⁺₂). The temperature equation is solved for three ion species (H⁺, He⁺ and O⁺) and for the electrons. Ion inertia is included in the ion momentum equation for motion along the geomagnetic field. This is important in modeling the topside ionosphere and plasmasphere where the plasma becomes collisionless.
SAMI3 includes 21 chemical reactions and radiative recombination, and uses a nonorthogonal, nonuniform, fixed grid for the magnetic latitude range +/- 89 degrees..
Drivers
Neutral composition, temperature, and winds: NRLMSISE00 (Picone et al., 2002) and HWM14 (Drob et al., 2015).
Solar radiation: Flare Irradiance Spectral Model version 2 (FISM v2)
Magnetic field: Richmond apex model [Richmond, 1995].
Neutral wind dynamo electric field: Determined from the solution of a 2D potential equation [Huba et at., 2008].
For the SAMI3/Weimer configuration: High latitude electric field: calculated from the empirical Weimer model for the potential.
For the SAMI3/AMPERE configuration: High latitude electric field: calculated using the Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling solver (MIX) developed by Merkin and Lyon (2010). The inputs to MIX are SAMI3's internal conductances, plus field-aligned current observations from Active Magnetosphere and Planetary Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE), derived from the 66+ satellite Iridium NEXT constellation's engineering magnetometer data. This potential calculation is described in Chartier et al (2022).
For ease of use, SAMI3 output is remapped to a regular grid using the Earth System Modeling Framework by Hill et al (2004)
Files
pymix_2019Apr24.zip
Files
(1.1 GB)
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Additional details
Related works
- Is derived from
- Dataset: 10.5880/Kp.0001 (DOI)
References
- Chartier, A. T., Huba, J. D., Sitaram, D. P., Merkin, V. G., Anderson, B. J., & Vines, S. K. (2022). High‐Latitude Electrodynamics Specified in SAMI3 Using AMPERE Field‐Aligned Currents. Space Weather, 20(1), e2021SW002890. DOI: 10.1029/2021SW002890
- Drob, D. P., Emmert, J. T., Meriwether, J. W., Makela, J. J., Doornbos, E., Conde, M., ... & Klenzing, J. H. (2015). An update to the Horizontal Wind Model (HWM): The quiet time thermosphere. Earth and Space Science, 2(7), 301-319. DOI: 10.1002/2014EA000089
- Hill, C., DeLuca, C., Suarez, M., & Da Silva, A. (2004). The architecture of the earth system modeling framework. Computing in Science & Engineering, 6(1), 18-28. DOI:10.1109/MCISE.2004.1255817Huba, J.D., G. Joyce, and J.A. Fedder, SAMI2 (Sami2 is Another Model of the Ionosphere): A New Low-Latitude Ionosphere Model J. Geophys. Res., 105, 23,035, 2000, DOI: 10.1029/2000JA000035
- Huba, J.D., G. Joyce, and J. Krall, Three-dimensional equatorial spread F modeling, Geo- phys. Res. Lett. 35, L10102, 2008, DOI: 10.1029/2008GL033509
- Merkin, V. G., & Lyon, J. G. (2010). Effects of the low‐latitude ionospheric boundary condition on the global magnetosphere. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 115(A10). DOI: 10.1029/2010JA015461
- Picone, J. M., Hedin, A. E., Drob, D. P., & Aikin, A. C. (2002). NRLMSISE‐00 empirical model of the atmosphere: Statistical comparisons and scientific issues. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 107(A12), SIA-15. DOI: 10.1029/2002JA009430
- Richmond, A., Ionospheric electrodynamics using magnetic apex coordinates, J. Geomag. Geoelec. 47, 191, 1995, DOI: 10.5636/jgg.47.191