Immel, Thomas J.Liu, GuipingEngland, Scott L.Goncharenko, Larisa P.Erickson, Phillip J.Lyashenko, Mykhaylo V.Milla, MarcoChau Chong Shing, Jorge LuisFrey, Harald U.Mende, Stephen B.Zhou, QihouStromme, AnjaPaxton, Larry J.2018-06-282018-06-282015-11Immel, T. J., Liu, G., England, S. L., Goncharenko, L. P., Erickson, P. J., Lyashenko, M. V., ... Paxton, L. J. (2015). The August 2011 URSI World Day campaign: Initial results.==$Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, 134,$==47-55. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jastp.2015.09.005index-oti2018http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12816/1583During a 10-day URSI World Day observational campaign beginning on August 1, 2011, an isolated, major geomagnetic storm occurred. On August 5, Kp reached values of 8− and Dst dropped to −113 nT. The occurrence of this isolated storm in the middle of a 10-day URSI World Day campaign provides and unprecedented opportunity to observe the coupling of solar wind energy into the magnetosphere and to evaluate the varied effects that occur in the coupled magnetosphere–ionosphere–thermosphere system. Dramatic changes in the ionosphere are seen at every one of the active radar stations, extending from Greenland down to equatorial Peru in the American sector and at middle latitudes in Ukraine. Data from TIMED and THEMIS are shown to support initial interpretations of the observations, where we focus on processes in the middle latitude afternoon sector during main phase, and the formation of a dense equatorial ionosphere during storm recovery. The combined measurements strongly suggest that the changes in ionospheric conditions observed after the main storm phase can be attributed in large part to changes in the stormtime thermosphere. This is through the generation of disturbance dynamo winds and also global neutral composition changes that either reduce or enhance plasma densities in a manner that depends mainly upon latitude. Unlike larger storms with possibly more sustained forcing, this storm exhibits minimal effects of persistent meridional stormtime wind drag, and little penetration of solar wind electric potentials to low latitudes. It is, therefore, an outstanding example of an impulsive event that exhibits longer-term effects through modification of the background atmosphere.application/pdfenginfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccessIonosphereRadarThermosphereAeronomyThe August 2011 URSI World Day campaign: Initial resultsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articlehttp://purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#1.05.01Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physicshttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jastp.2015.09.005