Much work has been done in the past decade to study the response of the low latitude ionosphere to Sudden Stratospheric Warmings (SSWs), that is, a temporary break-up of the polar vortex in the stratosphere, which itself is a result of polar jet stream wobbles caused by Rossby waves. SSW related strato-/mesospheric wind and temperature changes cause a resonant amplification of the lunar semidiurnal migrating tide (M2, 12.42 hr) because of the atmospheric Pekeris mode (Forbes & Zhang, 2012), and a solar semidiurnal migrating tide (SW2, 12 hr) enhancement due to stationary planetary wave interactions (e.g., Sathishkumar & Sridharan, 2013, and others) and changes in the tidal propagation and ozone forcing of SW2 (e.g., Jin et al., 2012, and others). The pioneering work by Goncharenko et al. (2010) showed that these semidiurnal enhancements substantially modify the low latitude F-region ionosphere, mainly through tidally driven E-region dynamo changes with resulting mapping of polarization electric fields into the F-region and vertical plasma drifts. SSWs also change the mean state of the thermosphere, that is, in thermospheric composition. Thermosphere Ionosphere Electrodynamics General Circulation Model (TIE-GCM) simulations by Yamazaki and Richmond (2013) hypothesized that enhanced tides cause more wave breaking in the lower thermosphere, thus setting up an upward/poleward two-cell circulation in the lower thermosphere that depletes atomic oxygen. Molecular diffusion then propagates the depleted atomic oxygen throughout the whole thermosphere, causing a roughly 20% reduction of daytime mean O/N 2 column densities. This was recently confirmed by Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) observations made during the 2019 SSW (Oberheide et al., 2020).An outstanding science challenge in researching the SSW impact on the upper atmosphere is the lack of suitable global observations that allow one to resolve the tidal winds in the E-region dynamo on a daily basis, that is, the "tidal weather." Single satellite tidal wind diagnostics such as from the TIMED Doppler Interferometer on the Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics satellite (TIDI/TIMED)