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  1. Abstract We implement a nudging module into the Thermosphere Ionosphere Electrodynamics General Circulation Model (TIEGCM) to identify effective techniques for incorporating global‐scale tides and medium‐scale gravity waves (GWs) that induce ionospheric variability. Nudging the full fields of basic state variables minimizes contamination from spectral aliasing and mode coupling, ensuring the most accurate reproduction of each tidal component. In contrast, nudging solely diurnal tides has substantial spectral leakage into semidiurnal tides, leading to underestimations of their own amplitudes and day‐to‐day variabilities (DTDVs). Nudging both diurnal and semidiurnal tides mitigates such underestimations, establishing a minimal requirement for reproducing tidal dynamics and ionospheric DTDVs. Lower boundary forcing (LBF) causes significant deviations of tidal amplitudes and DTDVs near the boundary, but only a ∼10% underestimation above it. The DTDV of vertical ion drift gradually increases with more wave components incorporated and shows a ∼10% underestimation with LBF. Constraining geopotential height (Z*) is critical in TIEGCM to properly add GWs at lower levels. Model runs withZ* constrained exhibit reduced sensitivity to nudging levels: one‐level nudging and LBF runs show 20%–30% underestimations of TID magnitudes compared to a four‐scale‐height nudging run. Conversely, whenZ* is unavailable and onlyU,V,Tare constrained, one‐level nudging and LBF lead to 80%–90% underestimations of TIDs, with LBF entirely missing wave features. Therefore, multi‐level nudging, especially withZ* unconstrained, is recommended to incorporate GWs. Overall, nudging provides a powerful tool to realistically incorporate observed or simulated waves across medium to global scales into ionosphere‐thermosphere models, offering a data‐driven perspective of variability for lower boundary conditions. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026