scholarly journals Superposition of gravity waves with different propagation characteristics observed by airborne and space-borne infrared sounders

Author(s):  
Isabell Krisch ◽  
Manfred Ern ◽  
Lars Hoffmann ◽  
Peter Preusse ◽  
Cornelia Strube ◽  
...  

Abstract. A complex gravity wave structure consisting of a superposition of multiple wave packets was observed above southern Scandinavia on 28 January 2016 with the Gimballed Limb Observer for Radiance Imaging of the Atmosphere (GLORIA). The tomographic measurement capability of GLORIA enabled a detailed 3-D reconstruction of the gravity wave field and the identification of multiple wave packets with different horizontal and vertical scales. The larger-scale gravity waves with horizontal wavelengths 5 around 400 km could be characterised using a 3-D wave-decomposition method. For the characterization of the smaller-scale wave components with horizontal wavelengths below 200 km, the 3-D wave-decomposition method needs to be further improved in the future. For the larger-scale gravity wave components, a combination of gravity-wave ray-tracing calculations and ERA5 reanalysis fields identified orography as well as a jet-exit region and a low pressure system as possible sources. All gravity waves propagate 10 upward into the middle stratosphere, but only the orographic waves stay directly above their source. The comparison with ERA5 also shows that ray-tracing provides reasonable results even for such complex cases with multiple overlapping wave packets. AIRS measurements in the middle stratosphere support these findings, even though their coarse vertical resolution barely resolves the observed wave structure in this case study. The high-resolution GLORIA observations are therefore an important source of information on gravity wave characteristics in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere region.

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (19) ◽  
pp. 11469-11490
Author(s):  
Isabell Krisch ◽  
Manfred Ern ◽  
Lars Hoffmann ◽  
Peter Preusse ◽  
Cornelia Strube ◽  
...  

Abstract. Many gravity wave analyses, based on either observations or model simulations, assume the presence of only a single dominant wave. This paper shows that there are much more complex cases with gravity waves from multiple sources crossing each others' paths. A complex gravity wave structure consisting of a superposition of multiple wave packets was observed above southern Scandinavia on 28 January 2016 with the Gimballed Limb Observer for Radiance Imaging of the Atmosphere (GLORIA). The tomographic measurement capability of GLORIA enabled a detailed 3-D reconstruction of the gravity wave field and the identification of multiple wave packets with different horizontal and vertical scales. The larger-scale gravity waves with horizontal wavelengths of around 400 km could be characterised using a 3-D wave-decomposition method. The smaller-scale wave components with horizontal wavelengths below 200 km were discussed by visual inspection. For the larger-scale gravity wave components, a combination of gravity-wave ray-tracing calculations and ERA5 reanalysis fields identified orography as well as a jet-exit region and a low-pressure system as possible sources. All gravity waves are found to propagate upward into the middle stratosphere, but only the orographic waves stay directly above their source. The comparison with ERA5 also shows that ray tracing provides reasonable results even for such complex cases with multiple overlapping wave packets. Despite their coarser vertical resolution compared to GLORIA measurements, co-located AIRS measurements in the middle stratosphere are in good agreement with the ray tracing and ERA5 results, proving once more the validity of simple ray-tracing models. Thus, this paper demonstrates that the high-resolution GLORIA observations in combination with simple ray-tracing calculations can provide an important source of information for enhancing our understanding of gravity wave propagation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (24) ◽  
pp. 14937-14953 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabell Krisch ◽  
Peter Preusse ◽  
Jörn Ungermann ◽  
Andreas Dörnbrack ◽  
Stephen D. Eckermann ◽  
...  

Abstract. Atmospheric gravity waves are a major cause of uncertainty in atmosphere general circulation models. This uncertainty affects regional climate projections and seasonal weather predictions. Improving the representation of gravity waves in general circulation models is therefore of primary interest. In this regard, measurements providing an accurate 3-D characterization of gravity waves are needed. Using the Gimballed Limb Observer for Radiance Imaging of the Atmosphere (GLORIA), the first airborne implementation of a novel infrared limb imaging technique, a gravity wave event over Iceland was observed. An air volume disturbed by this gravity wave was investigated from different angles by encircling the volume with a closed flight pattern. Using a tomographic retrieval approach, the measurements of this air mass at different angles allowed for a 3-D reconstruction of the temperature and trace gas structure. The temperature measurements were used to derive gravity wave amplitudes, 3-D wave vectors, and direction-resolved momentum fluxes. These parameters facilitated the backtracing of the waves to their sources on the southern coast of Iceland. Two wave packets are distinguished, one stemming from the main mountain ridge in the south of Iceland and the other from the smaller mountains in the north. The total area-integrated fluxes of these two wave packets are determined. Forward ray tracing reveals that the waves propagate laterally more than 2000 km away from their source region. A comparison of a 3-D ray-tracing version to solely column-based propagation showed that lateral propagation can help the waves to avoid critical layers and propagate to higher altitudes. Thus, the implementation of oblique gravity wave propagation into general circulation models may improve their predictive skills.


2000 ◽  
Vol 18 (10) ◽  
pp. 1316-1324 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.-D. Zhang ◽  
F. Yi ◽  
J.-F. Wang

Abstract. By analyzing the results of the numerical simulations of nonlinear propagation of three Gaussian gravity-wave packets in isothermal atmosphere individually, the nonlinear effects on the characteristics of gravity waves are studied quantitatively. The analyses show that during the nonlinear propagation of gravity wave packets the mean flows are accelerated and the vertical wavelengths show clear reduction due to nonlinearity. On the other hand, though nonlinear effects exist, the time variations of the frequencies of gravity wave packets are close to those derived from the dispersion relation and the amplitude and phase relations of wave-associated disturbance components are consistent with the predictions of the polarization relation of gravity waves. This indicates that the dispersion and polarization relations based on the linear gravity wave theory can be applied extensively in the nonlinear region.Key words: Meteorology and atmospheric dynamics (middle atmosphere dynamics; waves and tides)


2006 ◽  
Vol 63 (12) ◽  
pp. 3253-3276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christoph Zülicke ◽  
Dieter Peters

Poleward-breaking Rossby waves often induce an upper-level jet streak over northern Europe. Dominant inertia–gravity wave packets are observed downstream of this jet. The physical processes of their generation and propagation, in such a configuration, are investigated with a mesoscale model. The study is focused on an observational campaign from 17 to 19 December 1999 over northern Germany. Different simulations with the fifth-generation Pennsylvania State University–National Center for Atmospheric Research (PSU–NCAR) Mesoscale Model (MM5) have been performed. For a high-resolution process study, three domains were set up that encompass the evolution of Rossby waves and that of inertia–gravity waves. To minimize the impact of model damping, the horizontal and vertical resolution has been adjusted appropriately. With a novel statistical approach, the properties of inertia–gravity wave packets have been estimated. This method uses the horizontal divergence field and takes into account the spatial extension of a wave packet. It avoids the explicit treatment of the background field and works for arbitrary wavelength. Two classes of inertia–gravity waves were found: subsynoptic waves with a horizontal wavelength of about 500 km and mesoscale waves with a horizontal wavelength of about 200 km. The subsynoptic structures were also detected in radiosonde observations during this campaign. The similarity between simulated and observed wavelengths and amplitudes suggests that the simulations can be considered as near realistic. Spontaneous radiation from unbalanced flow is an important process of inertia–gravity wave generation. Synoptic-scale imbalances in the exit region of the upper-tropospheric jet streak were identified with the smoothed cross-stream Lagrangian Rossby number. In a number of simulations with different physics, it was found that the inertia–gravity wave activity was related to the tropospheric jet, orography, and moist convection. The upward propagation of inertia–gravity waves was favored during this event of a poleward-breaking Rossby wave. The presence of the polar vortex induced background winds exceeding the critical line. Consequently, the activity of inertia–gravity waves in the lower stratosphere increased by an order of magnitude during the case study. The successful simulation of the complex processes of generation and propagation showed the important role of poleward Rossby wave breaking for the appearance of inertia–gravity waves in the midlatitudes.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarthak Srivastava ◽  
Amal Chandran

<p>Ionospheric Total Electron Content (TEC) data from ground-based Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver networks have been used previously to detect Travelling Ionospheric Disturbances (TIDs). The TIDs have been shown to arise through coupling of lower atmosphere with the Ionosphere with Gravity Waves as the coupling mechanism. Gravity Waves generated by earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanoes, topography, convection and even solar eclipses have been detected using GPS TEC data. In this study, we identify Gravity Wave signatures in GPS TEC data derived from the Sumatran GPS Array (SuGAr) network. SuGAr is a network of 49 ground-based GPS stations along the convergent plate boundary between Indo-Australian and Asian tectonic plates in western Sumatra, Indonesia. Since initiation in 2002, data from SuGAr has primarily been used to study earthquakes and plate-tectonics in south-east Asia. Due to its location along the seismically-active region, SuGAr can provide valuable data for studying co-seismic Gravity Waves triggered by terrestrial-atmosphere coupling. Frequent occurrence of deep convective clouds in tropical region implies that SuGAr data also provides a unique opportunity to study atmospheric waves generated by convection. </p><p>We have identified Gravity Waves across a wide spectrum corresponding to seismic and tropical convection events in Sumatran region. Upon identifying the wave signatures, we characterized the wave parameters and identified the wave sources through suitable ray tracing calculations. In this paper we show acoustic-gravity waves generated by the 2012 Sumatra great earthquake sequence consisting of 2 largest strike slip earthquakes ever recorded. Spectral analysis indicates the presence of fundamental resonant frequencies for solid Earth-atmosphere coupling. Using a geometric ray tracing method, we also trace the waves very close to the reported epicentres of the double earthquake sequence. We also discuss inertia-gravity waves generated due to convection in South-East Asia using SuGAr TEC data for 2018. Indication of deep convective clouds is confirmed through satellite-based cloud top brightness temperature data.  Ray tracing is performed to further trace the observed waves to the convective system location.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Silva ◽  
Pedro Machado ◽  
Javier Peralta ◽  
Francisco Brasil

<ul> <li>An atmospheric internal gravity wave is an oscillatory disturbance on an atmospheric layer in which the buoyancy of the displaced air parcels acts as the restoring force. As such, it can only exist in a continuously stably stratified atmosphere, that is, a fluid in which the static stability is positive and horizontal variations (within the atmospheric layer) in pressure are negligible when compared to the vertical variations (in altitude) [Gilli et al. 2020; Peralta et al. 2008].</li> <li>These waves represent an efficient transport mechanism of energy and momentum through the atmosphere which can dissipate at different altitudes, influencing the atmospheric circulation of several layers in the atmosphere. This dissipation or wave breaking can dump the transported momentum and energy to the mean flow, contributing to an acceleration, thus significantly altering the thermal and dynamical regime of the atmosphere [Alexander et al. 2010].</li> <li>We present here results on the detection and characterisation of mesoscale waves on the lower clouds of Venus using data from the Visible Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS-M) onboard the European Venus Express space mission and from the IR2 instrument onboard the Venus Climate Orbiter (Akatsuki) japanese space mission. We used image navigation and processing techniques based on contrast enhancement and geometrical projections to characterise morphological properties of the detected waves such as horizontal wavelength, packet length and width, orientation and relative optical thickness drop between crests and troughs, as further described in [Peralta et al. 2018]. Additionally, phase velocity and trajectory tracking of wave-packets was also performed. We combined these observations to derive other properties of the waves such as vertical wavelength of detected packets. Our observations include 13 months worth of data from August 2007 to October 2008, when the VIRTIS-IR channel became unable to provide data, and all the available data set of IR2 which comprises images from January to November of 2016. Each image was analysed "by eye" and characterisation was manually performed with tools from the same software described in [Peralta et al. 2018].</li> <li>We characterised almost 300 wave-packets across more than 5500 images over a broad region of Venus' globe and our results show a wide range of properties and are not only consistent with previous observations [Peralta et al. 2008] but also expand upon them, taking advantage of two instruments that target the same cloud layer of Venus across multiple time periods.</li> </ul> <p><strong>Acknowledgements</strong></p> <p>This research is supported by the University of Lisbon through the BD2017 program based on the regulation of investigation grants of the University of Lisbon, approved by law 89/2014, the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon and the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology FCT through the project P TUGA PTDC/FIS-AST/29942/2017. We also acknowledge the support of the European Space Agency and the associated funding bodies Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales (France) and Agenzia Spaziale Italiana (Italy) as well as the full team behind the VIRTIS instrument, Venus Express space mission and the PSA archives. Additionally, we acknowledge the support and work of the entire Akatsuki team. The first author also acknowledges the full support of Japan Aerosapce Exploration Agency (JAXA) for enabling a short internship in their facilities which greatly contributed to this work.</p> <p><strong>References</strong></p> <p>[1] M.J. Alexander et al. Recent developments in gravity-wave effects in climate models and the global distribution of gravity-wave momentum flux from observations and models. Royal Meteorological Society, 2010.</p> <p>[2] G. Gilli et al., Impact of gravity waves on the middle atmosphere of mars: a non-orographic gravity wave parameterization based on global climate modeling and MCS observations. Journal of Geophysical Research - Planets, 2020.</p> <p>[3] J. Peralta et al. Characterization of mesoscale gravity waves in the upper and lower clouds of venus from vex-virtis images. Journal of Geophysical Research, 113, 2008. doi: 10.1029/2008JE003185.</p> <p>[4] J. Peralta et al. Analytical solution for waves in planets with atmospheric superrotation - I: acoustic and inertia-gravity waves. The Astrophysical journal, supplement series, 517 213:17, 2014. doi: 10.1088/0067-0049/213/1/17.</p> <p>[5] J. Peralta et al. Nightime winds at the lower clouds of venus with akatsuki/ir2: Longitudinal, local time and decadal variations from comparison with previous measurements. Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 2018. URL: arXiv:1810.05418v2.</p>


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (12) ◽  
pp. 3229-3240 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Wrasse ◽  
T. Nakamura ◽  
H. Takahashi ◽  
A. F. Medeiros ◽  
M. J. Taylor ◽  
...  

Abstract. Gravity wave signatures were extracted from OH airglow observations using all-sky CCD imagers at four different stations: Cachoeira Paulista (CP) (22.7° S, 45° W) and São João do Cariri (7.4° S, 36.5° W), Brazil; Tanjungsari (TJS) (6.9° S, 107.9° E), Indonesia and Shigaraki (34.9° N, 136° E), Japan. The gravity wave parameters are used as an input in a reverse ray tracing model to study the gravity wave vertical propagation trajectory and to estimate the wave source region. Gravity waves observed near the equator showed a shorter period and a larger phase velocity than those waves observed at low-middle latitudes. The waves ray traced down into the troposphere showed the largest horizontal wavelength and phase speed. The ray tracing results also showed that at CP, Cariri and Shigaraki the majority of the ray paths stopped in the mesosphere due to the condition of m2<0, while at TJS most of the waves are traced back into the troposphere. In summer time, most of the back traced waves have their final position stopped in the mesosphere due to m2<0 or critical level interactions (|m|→∞), which suggests the presence of ducting waves and/or waves generated in-situ. In the troposphere, the possible gravity wave sources are related to meteorological front activities and cloud convections at CP, while at Cariri and TJS tropical cloud convections near the equator are the most probable gravity wave sources. The tropospheric jet stream and the orography are thought to be the major responsible sources for the waves observed at Shigaraki.


2010 ◽  
Vol 23 (22) ◽  
pp. 5905-5926 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Orr ◽  
Peter Bechtold ◽  
John Scinocca ◽  
Manfred Ern ◽  
Marta Janiskova

Abstract In model cycle 35r3 (Cy35r3) of the ECMWF Integrated Forecast System (IFS), the momentum deposition from small-scale nonorographic gravity waves is parameterized by the Scinocca scheme, which uses hydrostatic nonrotational wave dynamics to describe the vertical evolution of a broad, constant, and isotropic spectrum of gravity waves emanating from the troposphere. The Cy35r3 middle atmosphere climate shows the following: (i) an improved representation of the zonal-mean circulation and temperature structure; (ii) a realistic parameterized gravity wave drag; (iii) a reasonable stationary planetary wave structure and stationary wave driving in July and an underestimate of the generation of stationary wave activity in the troposphere and stationary wave driving in January; (iv) an improved representation of the tropical variability of the stratospheric circulation, although the westerly phase of the semiannual oscillation is missing; and (v) a realistic horizontal distribution of momentum flux in the stratosphere. By contrast, the middle atmosphere climate is much too close to radiative equilibrium when the Scinocca scheme is replaced by Rayleigh friction, which was the standard method of parameterizing the effects of nonorographic gravity waves in the IFS prior to Cy35r3. Finally, there is a reduction in Cy35r3 short-range high-resolution forecast error in the upper stratosphere.


An equation given by Davey & Stewartson (1974) for the evolution of wave packets in three dimensions is employed to discuss the resonant transfer of energy within the peak of a narrow spectrum of gravity waves. It is shown that the coupling coefficient G ( k 1 , k 2 , k 3 , k 4 ) between four nearly equal wavenumbers k 1 ,..., k 4 is not zero (as had been speculated) but is equal to 4π. This implies that the exchange of energy within the peak itself is of dominant importance, and leads to a simplified discussion of the energy transfer.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 6797-6876 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. Wright ◽  
N. P. Hindley ◽  
A. C. Moss ◽  
N. J. Mitchell

Abstract. Gravity waves in the terrestrial atmosphere are a vital geophysical process, acting to transport energy and momentum on a wide range of scales and to couple the various atmospheric layers. Despite the importance of these waves, the many studies to date have often exhibited very dissimilar results, and it remains unclear whether these differences are primarily instrumental or methodological. Here, we address this problem by comparing observations made by a diverse range of the most widely-used gravity wave resolving instruments in a common geographic region around the southern Andes and Drake Passage, an area known to exhibit strong wave activity. Specifically, we use data from three limb-sounding radiometers (MLS-Aura, HIRDLS and SABER), the COSMIC GPS-RO constellation, a ground-based meteor radar, the AIRS infrared nadir sounder and radiosondes to examine the gravity wave potential energy (GWPE) and vertical wavelengths (λz) of individual gravity wave packets from the lower troposphere to the edge of the lower thermosphere. Our results show important similarities and differences. Limb sounder measurements show high intercorrelation, typically > 0.80 between any instrument pair. Meteor-radar observations agree in form with the limb sounders, despite vast technical differences. AIRS and radiosonde observations tend to be uncorrelated or anticorrelated with the other datasets, suggesting very different behaviour of the wave field in the different spectral regimes accessed by each instrument. Except in spring, we see little dissipation of GWPE throughout the stratosphere and lower mesosphere. Observed GWPE for individual wave packets exhibits a log-normal distribution, with short-timescale intermittency dominating over a well-repeated monthly-median seasonal cycle. GWPE and λz exhibit strong correlations with the stratospheric winds, but not with local surface winds. Our results provide guidance for interpretation and intercomparison of such datasets in their full context, and reinforce the vital point that no one dataset can represent the whole spectrum of gravity waves in the terrestrial atmosphere.


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