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Gravity wave intermittency derived from HIRDLS and SABER satellite limb soundings
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<p>Sources of atmospheric gravity waves are mostly located in the troposphere and the lower stratosphere. Gravity waves propagate away from their sources, re-distribute energy and momentum in the atmosphere, and exert drag on the atmospheric background flow where they dissipate. Therefore they are important drivers of the atmospheric circulation. In climate models, their effect on the background circulation is usually parameterized because of their relatively short horizontal and vertical wavelengths that are of the order of 10-1000km and 1-100km, respectively. Gravity wave parametrizations are very simplified. For example, they often neglect the fact that gravity wave source processes and gravity wave propagation conditions can vary on short temporal and spatial scales. Therefore the global distribution of gravity wave activity is very intermittent, which has also important consequences where gravity waves dissipate and exert drag on the background flow, and which should be accounted for in parametrizations.<br>For guiding models, global observations of the gravity wave distribution and its intermittency are needed. We derive gravity wave potential energies and absolute momentum fluxes from observations of the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder (HIRDLS) and the Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry (SABER) satellite instruments. As a measure of intermittency, we calculate global distributions of Gini coefficients. We find that our results are qualitatively in good agreement with previous findings from satellite, and similar in magnitude to intermittency obtained from previous superpressure balloon campaigns. In the stratosphere, strongest intermittency is found over orographic gravity wave sources, followed by gravity wave activity in the polar night jets. Intermittency in the tropical stratosphere is weakest. However, in the tropical upper mesosphere intermittency is increased, which is likely caused by the modulation of the gravity wave distribution by tides.</p>
Title: Gravity wave intermittency derived from HIRDLS and SABER satellite limb soundings
Description:
<p>Sources of atmospheric gravity waves are mostly located in the troposphere and the lower stratosphere.
Gravity waves propagate away from their sources, re-distribute energy and momentum in the atmosphere, and exert drag on the atmospheric background flow where they dissipate.
Therefore they are important drivers of the atmospheric circulation.
In climate models, their effect on the background circulation is usually parameterized because of their relatively short horizontal and vertical wavelengths that are of the order of 10-1000km and 1-100km, respectively.
Gravity wave parametrizations are very simplified.
For example, they often neglect the fact that gravity wave source processes and gravity wave propagation conditions can vary on short temporal and spatial scales.
Therefore the global distribution of gravity wave activity is very intermittent, which has also important consequences where gravity waves dissipate and exert drag on the background flow, and which should be accounted for in parametrizations.
<br>For guiding models, global observations of the gravity wave distribution and its intermittency are needed.
We derive gravity wave potential energies and absolute momentum fluxes from observations of the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder (HIRDLS) and the Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry (SABER) satellite instruments.
As a measure of intermittency, we calculate global distributions of Gini coefficients.
We find that our results are qualitatively in good agreement with previous findings from satellite, and similar in magnitude to intermittency obtained from previous superpressure balloon campaigns.
In the stratosphere, strongest intermittency is found over orographic gravity wave sources, followed by gravity wave activity in the polar night jets.
Intermittency in the tropical stratosphere is weakest.
However, in the tropical upper mesosphere intermittency is increased, which is likely caused by the modulation of the gravity wave distribution by tides.
</p>.
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