scholarly journals Investigation of sources of gravity waves observed in the Brazilian Equatorial region on 08 April 2005

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oluwakemi Dare-Idowu ◽  
Igo Paulino ◽  
Cosme A. O. B. Figueiredo ◽  
Amauri F. Medeiros ◽  
Ricardo A. Buriti ◽  
...  

Abstract. On 08 April 2005, a strong gravity wave activity (more than 3 hours) was observed in São João do Cariri (7.4° S, 36.5° W). These waves propagated to the southeast and presented different spectral characteristics (wavelength, period and phase speed). Using OH airglow images, the parameters of 5 observed gravity waves were calculated; the wavelengths ranged from ~ 90 to 150 km, the periods from ~ 26 to 67 min and the phase speeds from 32 to 71 m/s. A reserve ray-tracing analysis was performed to investigate the likely sources of these waves. The ray-tracing database was composed of temperature profiles from NRLMSISE-00 model and SABER measurements and wind profiles from HWM-14 model and meteor radar data. According to the ray path, the likely source of these gravity waves was the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone with intense convective processes taking place in the northern part of the observatory. Also, the observed preferential propagation direction of the waves to the southeast could be explained using blocking diagrams, i.e., due to the wind filtering process.

2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 507-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oluwakemi Dare-Idowu ◽  
Igo Paulino ◽  
Cosme A. O. B. Figueiredo ◽  
Amauri F. Medeiros ◽  
Ricardo A. Buriti ◽  
...  

Abstract. On 8 April 2005, strong gravity wave (GW) activity (over a period of more than 3 h) was observed in São João do Cariri (7.4∘ S, 36.5∘ W). These waves propagated to the southeast and presented different spectral characteristics (wavelength, period and phase speed). Using hydroxyl (OH) airglow images, the characteristics of the observed GWs were calculated; the wavelengths ranged between 90 and 150 km, the periods ranged from ∼26 to 67 min and the phase speeds ranged from 32 to 71 m s−1. A reverse ray-tracing analysis was performed to search for the possible sources of the waves that were detected. The ray-tracing database was composed of temperature profiles from the Naval Research Laboratory Mass Spectrometer Incoherent Scatter (NRLMSISE-00) model and SABER measurements as well as wind profiles from the Horizontal Wind Model (HWM) and meteor radar data. According to the ray tracing result, the likely source of these observed gravity waves was the Intertropical Convergence Zone, which caused intense convective processes to take place in the northern part of the observatory. Also, the observed preferential propagation direction of the waves to the southeast could be explained using blocking diagrams, i.e. due to the wind filtering process.


2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 2709-2721 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Pramitha ◽  
M. Venkat Ratnam ◽  
A. Taori ◽  
B. V. Krishna Murthy ◽  
D. Pallamraju ◽  
...  

Abstract. Sources and propagation characteristics of high-frequency gravity waves observed in the mesosphere using airglow emissions from Gadanki (13.5° N, 79.2° E) and Hyderabad (17.5° N, 78.5° E) are investigated using reverse ray tracing. Wave amplitudes are also traced back, including both radiative and diffusive damping. The ray tracing is performed using background temperature and wind data obtained from the MSISE-90 and HWM-07 models, respectively. For the Gadanki region, the suitability of these models is tested. Further, a climatological model of the background atmosphere for the Gadanki region has been developed using nearly 30 years of observations available from a variety of ground-based (MST radar, radiosondes, MF radar) and rocket- and satellite-borne measurements. ERA-Interim products are utilized for constructing background parameters corresponding to the meteorological conditions of the observations. With the reverse ray-tracing method, the source locations for nine wave events could be identified to be in the upper troposphere, whereas for five other events the waves terminated in the mesosphere itself. Uncertainty in locating the terminal points of wave events in the horizontal direction is estimated to be within 50–100 km and 150–300 km for Gadanki and Hyderabad wave events, respectively. This uncertainty arises mainly due to non-consideration of the day-to-day variability in the tidal amplitudes. Prevailing conditions at the terminal points for each of the 14 events are provided. As no convection in and around the terminal points is noticed, convection is unlikely to be the source. Interestingly, large (~9 m s−1km−1) vertical shears in the horizontal wind are noticed near the ray terminal points (at 10–12 km altitude) and are thus identified to be the source for generating the observed high-phase-speed, high-frequency gravity waves.


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.


Atmosphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 405
Author(s):  
Yuan Wang ◽  
Lifeng Zhang ◽  
Jun Peng ◽  
Yun Zhang ◽  
Tongfeng Wei

Spectral characteristics of lower-stratospheric gravity waves generated in idealized mei-yu front and tropical cyclone (TC) are compared by performing high-resolution simulations. The results suggest that the systems which organize convection in different forms can generate waves with distinctly different presentation. The mei-yu front appears as a linear zonal wave source and gravity waves are dominated by cross-frontal (meridional) propagating components. The northward (southward) components have dominant meridional wavelengths of 125–333 km (>250 km), periods of 100–200 min (83–143 min), and phase speeds of 0–15 m s−1 (15–20 m s−1). The TC appears as a point wave source and gravity waves propagate equally in various horizontal directions. The waves exhibit greater power and broader spectral distributions compared with those in the mei-yu front, with dominant horizontal wavelengths longer than 62.5 km, periods of 33–600 min, and phase speeds slower than ~40 m s−1.


Author(s):  
Yakov Afanasyev ◽  
Vasily Korabel

Rapidly moving storm crossing the shelf from shallow water to deep water can generate tsunami-like waves which can cause local flooding and damage to docks when the waves hit the coast. We report on laboratory experiments to examine the reflection of waves generated by a moving disturbance from the shelf. Experiments are performed in a two-layer fluid consisting of a layer of oil based ferrofluid lying on top of a layer of water with step bottom. The disturbance is generated by a permanent magnet moving above the surface of ferrofluid. Digital images of the flow are analyzed to obtain the evolution of the wave field. The experimental flows demonstrate two distinct regimes, namely subcritical when the speed of the magnet is less than the phase speed of the wave, and supercritical when the speed of the magnet is greater than the phase speed of the wave. In subcritical regime the disturbance is localized and its size is determined by the spatial extent of the forcing. In supercritical regime the waves form two beams extending at “Mach angle” with respect to the direction of motion. Oblique wave incident on the shelf can experience total reflection if the angle between the wave front and the shelf is greater than a critical value.


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.


2010 ◽  
Vol 27 (8) ◽  
pp. 1355-1361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy A. Coleman ◽  
Kevin R. Knupp ◽  
Daryl E. Herzmann

Abstract On 6 May 2007, an intense atmospheric undular bore moved over eastern Iowa. A “Webcam” in Tama, Iowa, captured dramatic images of the effects of the bore and associated gravity waves on cloud features, because its viewing angle was almost normal to the propagation direction of the waves. The time lapse of these images has become a well-known illustration of atmospheric gravity waves. The environment was favorable for bore formation, with a wave-reflecting unstable layer above a low-level stable layer. Surface pressure and wind data are correlated for the waves in the bore, and horizontal wind oscillations are also shown by Doppler radar data. Quantitative analysis of the time-lapse photography shows that the sky brightens in wave troughs because of subsidence and darkens in wave ridges because of ascent.


2013 ◽  
Vol 726 ◽  
pp. 123-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan Paldor ◽  
Yair De-Leon ◽  
Ofer Shamir

AbstractThe construction of approximate Schrödinger eigenvalue equations for planetary (Rossby) waves and for inertia–gravity (Poincaré) waves on an ocean-covered rotating sphere yields highly accurate estimates of the phase speeds and meridional variation of these waves. The results are applicable to fast rotating spheres such as Earth where the speed of barotropic gravity waves is smaller than twice the tangential speed on the equator of the rotating sphere. The implication of these new results is that the phase speed of Rossby waves in a barotropic ocean that covers an Earth-like planet is independent of the speed of gravity waves for sufficiently large zonal wavenumber and (meridional) mode number. For Poincaré waves our results demonstrate that the dispersion relation is linear, (so the waves are non-dispersive and the phase speed is independent of the wavenumber), except when the zonal wavenumber and the (meridional) mode number are both near 1.


2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (22) ◽  
pp. 12133-12142 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. D. Demissie ◽  
P. J. Espy ◽  
N. H. Kleinknecht ◽  
M. Hatlen ◽  
N. Kaifler ◽  
...  

Abstract. Four years of noctilucent cloud (NLC) images from an automated digital camera in Trondheim and results from a ray-tracing model are used to extend the climatology of gravity waves to higher latitudes and to identify their sources during summertime. The climatology of the summertime gravity waves detected in NLC between 64 and 74° N is similar to that observed between 60 and 64° N by Pautet et al. (2011). The direction of propagation of gravity waves observed in the NLC north of 64° N is a continuation of the north and northeast propagation as observed in south of 64° N. However, a unique population of fast, short wavelength waves propagating towards the SW is observed in the NLC, which is consistent with transverse instabilities generated in situ by breaking gravity waves (Fritts and Alexander, 2003). The relative amplitude of the waves observed in the NLC Mie scatter have been combined with ray-tracing results to show that waves propagating from near the tropopause, rather than those resulting from secondary generation in the stratosphere or mesosphere, are more likely to be the sources of the prominent wave structures observed in the NLC. The coastal region of Norway along the latitude of 70° N is identified as the primary source region of the waves generated near the tropopause.


1978 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 623-639 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. A. Thorpe

The investigation of the effects which a changing mean flow has on a uniform train of internal gravity waves (Thorpe 1978a) is continued by considering waves in a uniformly accelerating stratified plane Couette flow with constant density gradient. Experiments reveal a change in the mode structure and phase distribution of the waves, and their eventual breaking near the boundary where the mean flow is greatest, the phase speed of the waves being positive. A linear numerical model is devised which accurately describes the waves up to the onset of their breaking, and this is used to investigate their energetics. The working of the Reynolds stress against the mean velocity gradient results in a very rapid transfer of energy from the waves to the mean flow, so that by the time breaking occurs only a small fraction of their initial energy remains for possible transfer into potential energy of the fluid.The consequences have important applications in oceanography and meteorology, to flow stability and flow generation, and explain some earlier laboratory observations.


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