Jain, Sonal K.Deighan, JustinChaffin, MikeHolsclaw, GregLillis, RobFillingim, MattEvans, J. ScottCorreira, JohnAlMatroushi, HessaLootah, FatmaEngland, Scott L.AlMazmi, HoorThiemann, EdChamberlin, PhilEparvier, Frank2023-04-282023-04-282022-10e2022GL099885http://hdl.handle.net/10919/114852We present the first continuous observations of the extreme and far ultraviolet (EUV and FUV) dayglow emissions measured by Emirates Mars Ultraviolet Spectrometer (EMUS) onboard the Emirates Mars Mission. We found excellent agreement between the previous observations from the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope and recent observations by EMUS both in shape and magnitude. We presented the average disk brightness of major EUV and FUV emissions for about 10 months of data from April 2021 to February 2022. The solar activity was mild/minimum during the first half of the period presented in this study, but we noticed significant day-to-day variations in the major dayglow emissions independent of solar activity, indicating possible coupling from the lower atmosphere via waves/tides. The solar activity increased significantly during the second half of the study period. Our analysis showed that all major EUV and FUV emissions are highly correlated with solar forcing as well as seasonal changes.application/pdfenCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 InternationalSpectrometer experimentupper-atmosphereMorphology of Extreme and Far Ultraviolet Martian Airglow Emissions Observed by the EMUS Instrument on Board the Emirates Mars MissionArticle - RefereedGeophysical Research Lettershttps://doi.org/10.1029/2022GL09988549191944-8007