Emmert, J. T.Jones, M.Siskind, D. E.Drob, D. P.Picone, J. M.Stevens, M. H.Bailey, Scott M.Bender, S.Bernath, P. F.Funke, B.Hervig, M. E.Perot, K.2023-05-042023-05-042022-10e2022JA030896http://hdl.handle.net/10919/114907We have developed an empirical model of nitric oxide (NO) number density at altitudes from similar to 73 km to the exobase, as a function of altitude, latitude, day of year, solar zenith angle, solar activity, and geomagnetic activity. The model is part of the NRLMSIS (R) 2.1 empirical model of atmospheric temperature and species densities; this upgrade to NRLMSIS 2.0 consists solely of the addition of NO. MSIS 2.1 assimilates observations from six space-based instruments: UARS/HALOE, SNOE, Envisat/MIPAS, ACE/FTS, Odin/SMR, and AIM/SOFIE. We additionally evaluated the new model against independent extant NO data sets. In this paper, we describe the formulation and fitting of the model, examine biases between the data sets and model and among the data sets, compare with another empirical NO model (NOEM), and discuss scientific aspects of our analysis.application/pdfenCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 Internationalempiricalatmospheremodelcompositiontemperaturenitric oxideNRLMSIS 2.1: An Empirical Model of Nitric Oxide Incorporated Into MSISArticle - RefereedJournal of Geophysical Research-Space Physicshttps://doi.org/10.1029/2022JA030896127102169-9402