Abstract. The seasonal e ects in the thermosphere and ionosphere responses to the precipitating electron¯ux and ®eld-aligned current variations, of the order of an hour in duration, in the summer and winter cusp regions have been investigated using the global numerical model of the Earth's upper atmosphere. Two variants of the calculations have been performed both for the IMF B y < 0. In the ®rst variant, the model input data for the summer and winter precipitating¯uxes and ®eld-aligned currents have been taken as geomagnetically symmetric and equal to those used earlier in the calculations for the equinoctial conditions. It has been found that both ionospheric and thermospheric disturbances are more intensive in the winter cusp region due to the lower conductivity of the winter polar cap ionosphere and correspondingly larger electric ®eld variations leading to the larger Joule heating e ects in the ion and neutral gas temperature, ion drag e ects in the thermospheric winds and ion drift e ects in the F2-region electron concentration. In the second variant, the calculations have been performed for the events of 28±29 January, 1992 when precipitations were weaker but the magnetospheric convection was stronger than in the ®rst variant. Geomagnetically asymmetric input data for the summer and winter precipitating¯uxes and ®eld-aligned currents have been taken from the patterns derived by combining data obtained from the satellite, radar and ground magnetometer observations for these events. Calculated patterns of the ionospheric convection and thermospheric circulation have been compared with observations and it has been established that calculated patterns of the ionospheric convection for both winter and summer hemispheres are in a good agreement with the observations. Calculated patterns of the thermospheric circulation are in a good agreement with the average circulation for the Southern (summer) Hemisphere obtained from DE-2 data for IMF B y < 0 but for the Northern (winter) Hemisphere there is a disagreement at high latitudes in the afternoon sector of the cusp region. At the same time, the model results for this sector agree with other DE-2 data and with the ground-based FPI data. All ionospheric and thermospheric disturbances in the second variant of the calculations are more intensive in the winter cusp region in comparison with the summer one and this seasonal di erence is larger than in the ®rst variant of the calculations, especially in the electron density and all temperature variations. The means that the seasonal e ects in the cusp region are stronger in the thermospheric and ionospheric responses to the FAC variations than to the precipitation disturbances.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.