A global, three-dimensional, time-dependent numerical model of the thermosphere has been created to simulate the dynamical behavior of the earth's thermosphere under a wide variety of geophysical conditions. Comparison of the model's predictions with the available data from ground-based, rocket and satellite techniques has shown that thermospheric dynamics can be realistically simulated by considering only three processes which deposit energy, or energy and momentum, in the thermosphere. Comparisons between the simulations and available data allow assessment of the magnitudes of the various processes as functions, particularly, of solar and geomagnetic activity. The model is fully self-consistent in solving the neutral gas equations of momentum, energy and continuity, including all the Coriolis, inertial, viscosity and nonlinear terms, but assumes that the thermosphere contains a single species whose mean molecular weight varies only with the pressure. At times when the mean meridional wind is la... Abstract A global, three-dimensional, time-dependent numerical model of the thermosphere has been created to simulate the dynamical behavior of the earth's thermosphere under a wide variety of geophysical conditions. Comparison of the model's predictions with the available data from ground-based, rocket and satellite techniques has shown that thermospheric dynamics can be realistically simulated by considering only three processes which deposit energy, or energy and momentum, in the thermosphere. Comparisons between the simulations and available data allow assessment of the magnitudes of the various processes as functions, particularly, of solar and geomagnetic activity. The model is fully self-consistent in solving the neutral gas equations of momentum, energy and continuity, including all the Coriolis, inertial, viscosity and nonlinear terms, but assumes that the thermosphere contains a single species whose mean molecular weight varies only with the pressure. At times when the mean meridional wind is la...