Upper atmosphere response to stratosphere sudden warming: Local time and height dependence simulated by GAIA model

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Upper atmosphere response to stratosphere sudden warming: Local time and height dependence simulated by GAIA model"

Transcription

1 GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 4, , doi:1.12/grl.5146, 213 Upper atmosphere response to stratosphere sudden warming: Local time and height dependence simulated by GAIA model Huixin Liu, 1,2 Hidekatsu Jin, 3 Yasunobu Miyoshi, 1,2 Hitoshi Fujiwara, 4 and Hiroyuki Shinagawa 3 Received 17 December 212; revised 6 January 213; accepted 7 January 213; published 4 February 213. [1] The whole atmosphere model GAIA is employed to shed light on atmospheric response to the 29 major stratosphere sudden warming (SSW) from the ground to exobase. Distinct features are revealed about SSW impacts on thermospheric temperature and density above 1 km altitude. (1) The effect is primarily quasi-semidiurnal in tropical regions, with warming in the noon and pre-midnight sectors and cooling in the dawn and dusk sectors. (2) This pattern exists at all altitudes above 1 km, with its phase being almost constant above 2 km, but propagates downward in the lower thermosphere between 1 and 2 km. (3) The northern polar region experiences warming in a narrow layer between 1 and 1 km, while the southern polar region experiences cooling throughout 1 4 km altitudes. (4) The global net thermal effect on the atmosphere above 1 km is a cooling of approximately 12 K. These characteristics provide us with an urgently needed global context to better connect and understand the increasing upper atmosphere observations during SSW events. Citation: Liu,H.,H.Jin, Y. Miyoshi, H. Fujiwara, and H. Shinagawa (213), Upper atmosphere response to stratosphere sudden warming: Local time and height dependence simulated by GAIA model, Geophys. Res. Lett., 4, , doi:1.12/grl Introduction [2] The stratosphere sudden warming (SSW) is a dramatic meteorological event in the winter polar stratosphere. Its formation mechanism and cooling impact on the mesosphere has been well demonstrated by Matsuno [1971]. Extension of SSW impacts to the lower thermosphere was predicted by Liu and Roble [22] using the Thermosphere-Ionosphere-Mesosphere Electrodynamic General Circulation Model (TIME-GCM), showing a warming effect near 12 km. SSW impacts on the upper atmosphere have been recently revealed in various observations. Using Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) satellite observations, Funke et al. [21] found warming effect in the polar lower 1 Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan. 2 International Center for Space Weather Research and Education, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan. 3 National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Tokyo, Japan. 4 Faculty of Science and Technology, Seikei University, Tokyo, Japan. Corresponding author: H. Liu, Earth and Planetary Science Division, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan. (huixin@serc.kyushu-u.ac.jp) 213. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved /13/1.12/grl thermosphere during the record-breaking major SSW event in January 29, hence supporting the prediction of Liu and Roble [22] in the northern polar region. At middle latitude, Goncharenko and Zhang [28] reported ion cooling above 15 km, but warming around 12 km during the SSW28 event. Since the ion temperature closely follows neutral temperature [Schunk and Nagy, 2], their results indicate similar SSW impact on the thermosphere. However, this pattern is in opposite sense to the prediction of Liu and Roble [22, see Figure 2 therein] at midlatitudes. At even higher altitude, Liu et al. [211] reported decrease of thermospheric density simultaneously observed by CHAMP and GRACE satellites at 325 and 475 km altitude in the dawn and dusk sectors. Therefore, one asks: What is the global context to consistently connect these observations at different altitude and latitude? [3] Furthermore, the SSW impact on the ionosphere has been demonstrated to strongly depend on local time (), being roughly semidiurnal as observed in various ionospheric parameters like the total electron content, the Sq current, etc. [e.g., Goncharenko et al., 21; Yamazaki et al., 212]. Given the close coupling between the thermosphere and ionosphere via either ion drag or atmospheric waves, it is easy to postulate that SSW impacts on the thermosphere may well be local time dependent. So far, no thermosphere observation covering all local times has been reported during SSW events. The prediction of SSW effects on the lower thermosphere by Liu and Roble [22] was given as all local time averaged. This lack of local time information greatly limits our understanding of upper atmosphere observations during SSWs. [4] Therefore, the present study seeks to obtain a global picture of the SSW impact on the upper atmosphere, with a focus on the local time and height dependence of thermosphere response in terms of temperature. For this purpose, we employ the fully coupled atmosphere-ionosphere model, GAIA. 2. GAIA Model [5] The GAIA model is a self-consistent fully coupled model of the Earth s lower atmosphere, thermosphere, and ionosphere. It covers the altitude range from the ground to exobase (~5 km at solar minimum). Details about the model are described in Jin et al. [212]. By interactively coupling the physical processes in the lower and upper atmosphere, GAIA has been proved to be highly capable in modeling prominent features in the thermosphere and ionosphere, e.g., the equatorial mass density anomaly, the equatorial wind jet, and the wave-4 structures [Stolle and Liu, 213, and references therein]. The model s

2 capability in characterizing gravity and tidal waves has also been demonstrated in various studies [e.g., Miyoshi and Fujiwara, 23]. [6] The GAIA model is employed to simulate the upper atmosphere response to the major SSW in January 29. A nudging technique is used to converge the model results below km altitude to observations represented by the Japanese 25 year Reanalysis Project data [Jin et al., 212]. During the simulation period of 1 November 28 to 31 March 29, the F1.7 index varied only about 1.5 % around For investigating SSW effects, a fixed crosspolar cap potential of kv and a quiet particle precipitation condition were held throughout the simulation period to exclude any geomagnetic activity effect. Simulation results on the stratosphere and ionosphere are presented in Jin et al. [212]. Those results show good agreement to satellite observations in both the stratosphere and ionosphere, hence demonstrating the model s capability in capturing key processes during the SSW29. This current paper reports the corresponding results on the thermosphere from the same simulation. Global features of SSW impacts are presented in terms of temperature and density. 3. Results 3.1. Comparison with Thermospheric Density Observations [7] As a validation of GAIA results on the thermosphere, we first compare with available observations. Figure 1 depicts thermospheric densities observed by CHAMP satellite near 17 and 5 at ~325 km altitude and that simulated by GAIA model. Longitudinally averaged data are used throughout the present study. The CHAMP density is normalized to Kp = 1 using NRLMSIS- model to minimize geomagnetic activity effects [Liu et al., 211]. Good agreements between the observations and simulations exist in large-scale features, with prominent density drop during the SSW (pink line) at low and middle latitudes in both sectors. The obvious difference in absolute density values is due to difficulties in determining a true baseline for both the instrument and model. However, it is the temporal variation that is more pertinent to the physical processes in dramatically changing events like SSW. [8] To examine the temporal variation more closely, the average density between S and N is extracted and line plotted in the third and fourth rows of Figure 1. Despite differences in absolute values, the same general trend emerges in both CHAMP and GAIA density. That is, the density starts dropping from day of year (DOY) 18/19, reaches a minimum near DOY 25/26, and gradually recovers afterward. Overlaid on this slow-varying trend, CHAMP density shows some rapid fluctuations during DOY These might be remnant effects of imperfect removal of geomagnetic activity during the Kp normalization using NRLMSIS-. As Kp briefly increased from 1 to 3 on DOY 26 and to 4 on DOY 35, density peaks are discernible around these days. Possible geomagnetic contribution to CHAMP observations was also pointed out by Fuller-Rowell et al. [211]. Thus, the CHAMP density actually consists of a short time-scale (~1 2 days) perturbation driven by geomagnetic activity and a long time-scale (~ days) perturbation driven by SSW. The GAIA density instead represents exclusively the SSW-driven component Local Time Dependence [9] The polar-orbiting CHAMP satellite could sample only two local times 12 h apart during the SSW 29, hence giving an incomplete picture. To complement this, we utilize the GAIA simulation. The good model-observation agreement on thermospheric density presented above, along with those in the ionosphere and stratosphere [Jin et al., 212] warrants GAIA as a suitable alternative for investigating global features of SSW impacts. [1] Figures 2a and 2b display the longitudinally averaged thermospheric mass density and temperature at 325 km altitude in tropical regions averaged between S and N. White line indicates SSW peak on DOY 23. A significant phase shift occurs around DOY 18 19, with temperature and density maxima shifting to earlier. To examine more closely perturbations during the SSW, we take the average density and temperature during DOY 1 1 as references and calculate the deviation from them. Figures 2c and 2d show perturbations averaged during DOY 25. Both density and temperature response are seen to strongly depend on, exhibiting a quasi-semidiurnal pattern with increase (warming) in the noon and pre-midnight sectors, but decrease (cooling) in the dawn and dusk sectors. The CHAMP observations near 5 and 17 fall both into cooling sectors, thus could observe only density decrease but not increase. Another feature to note here is that the warming magnitude (15 K near 21 ) is significantly smaller than the cooling magnitude ( 4 K near 17 ). This indicates the drop of zonal mean during SSW, which is presented in section Height Dependence [11] To see how persistent this quasi-semidiurnal feature is in altitude, we examine its height variation. Since perturbation patterns in density and temperature are nearly identical, only the temperature is presented in the following. Figures 3a and 3b display temperature perturbations in tropical and polar regions during DOY 25. In tropics (Figure 3a), the quasi-semidiurnal feature exists at all altitudes above 1 km, with interchanging warming and cooling sectors. Its phase remains constant above 2 km altitude, but propagates downward between 1 and 2 km. In northern polar regions (Figure 3b), warming of 2 K occurs at all s in a narrow layer between 1 and 1 km. Above 1 km, weak temperature perturbation occurs whose sign varies with. Below 1 km, little dependence is seen as generally known. [12] Next, we examine temperature perturbations in the meridional plane. Figures 3c and 3d present perturbations in the warming and cooling sectors near 11 and 17, respectively (warming and cooling refer to regions above 2 km in the tropics). At 11 in northern polar regions (Figure 3c), the well-known SSW feature appears below 1 km, with stratosphere warming of ~35 K and mesosphere cooling of ~ K. In the lower thermosphere (1 15 km), warming of 1 K occurs north of 4 N while strong cooling of K occurs near the equator. Above 15 km, warming occurs at most latitudes except for regions south of S. The warming in northern polar thermosphere with peaks of ~15 K around 12 km is consistent with MIPAS satellite observations [Funke et al., 21] and TIME-GCM predictions [Liu and Roble, 22]. The GAIA model further reveals 636

3 CHAMP CHAMP Tn (K) 22 GAIA GAIA Tn (K) 22 ρ (1 12 kg m 3 ) CHAMP CHAMP ρ (1 12 kg m 3 ) GAIA GAIA DoY 29 DoY Figure 1. Geographic latitude versus day of year (DOY) distribution of the thermospheric mass density (in unit of 1 kg m 3 )at~325 km near 17 and 5 observed by CHAMP and simulated by GAIA during DOY (first and second rows); the pink line is the stratospheric temperature at 1 hpa averaged over 7 N 9 Ν. Temporal variation of tropical density averaged within S Ν. A slow-varying trend with density decreasing before DOY and recovering afterward emerges in both observations and model results. that this warming continues to extend to upper thermosphere around N. [13] At 17 (Figure 3d), the temperature perturbation below 1 km resembles that at 11, reflecting the non- dependent characteristic below 1 km. Above 1 km, however, the perturbation structure significantly differs from that at 11. In the lower thermosphere (1 15 km), warming occurs at most latitudes with peaks near the equator and northern middle latitudes. Above 15 km, cooling occurs south of 45 N, while slight warming of a few kelvin occurs around N. The altitude dependence at northern middle latitudes shown in Figures 3c and 3d is consistent with ion temperature observations near 43 N [Goncharenko and Zhang, 28], which show cooling above 15 km and warming around 12 km Global Net Effect [14] The above results reveal that SSW impacts on thermospheric temperature significantly depend on, altitude, and latitude. To estimate the global net effect, we examine the zonal mean temperature perturbation (average over all s). Figure 4a shows that the zonal mean above 1 km is a slight warming in northern polar regions but cooling at other latitudes. Strongest cooling of 4 K occurs in southern polar regions. This zonal mean temperature drop during SSW has caused the asymmetric feature in Figures 2c and 2d, where the warming amplitude (15 K near 21 ) is much smaller than the cooling amplitude ( 4 K near 17 ). When further averaged over all latitudes, the global net effect above 1 km is estimated to be cooling of approximately 12 K (see Figure 4b), with a cooling rate of about.9 K/d during DOY The high cooling rate during the 2 weeks period apparently cannot be explained by long-term seasonal variations. Furthermore, this upper atmosphere cooling is accompanied by the stratosphere warming, mesosphere cooling, and warming between about 8 and 1 km (see Figure 4c). 4. Discussions and Conclusions [15] The GAIA model is used to simulate the atmosphereionosphere system response to the SSW 29 event. The model results agree well with reported observations carried out at various time and locations. On top of these point-to-point agreements, the model reveals several distinct global features as discussed below. [16] First, SSW impacts on the tropical upper atmosphere are primarily quasi-semidiurnal, with warming in the noon 637

4 4 a. km b km DoY 29 2 DoY Δρ (1 12 kg m 3 ).5.5 c. Δρ 5 17 ΔTn (K) 2 2 d. ΔTn Figure 2. (a and b) Local time versus DOY distribution of GAIA thermospheric density (in unit of 1 12 kg m 3 )and temperature (in unit of kelvin) averaged over S N. White line indicates SSW peak on DOY23. (c and d) Density and temperature deviations from pre-ssw level (DOY 1 1), averaged during DOY 25. A quasi-semidiurnal pattern is seen, with an increase in noon and pre-midnight sectors and a decrease in dawn and dusk sectors. Height(km) a. ΔTn [ ] c b. ΔTn [ 9 ] d Height(km) Figure 3. Temperature perturbations (ΔTn (K)) averaged during DOY 25. (a and b) Height versus distribution in tropical ( S Ν) and northern polar regions ( N 9 Ν). (c and d) Height versus geographic latitude distribution at 11 and 17. In tropics, ΔTn exhibits strong dependence above 1 km, with downward phase propagation between 1 and 2 km. 638

5 Latitude ΔTn (K) Height(km) a. ΔTn Zonal Mean [1 4]km K b ΔTn Global Mean [1 4] km c. ΔTn Global Mean K DoY, 29 Figure 4. (a) Latitude versus DOY distribution of the zonal mean ΔTn (average over all s and 1 4 km altitudes). (b) DOY variation of global mean ΔTn (average over all s, 1 4 km altitudes, and latitudes). (c) Altitude versus DOY distribution of the global mean ΔTn (average over all s and latitudes). The SSW s global net effect on the upper atmosphere is a cooling of approximately 12 K. and pre-midnight sectors and cooling in the dawn and dusk sectors. This contrasts greatly to the lower atmosphere (below 1 km) where little dependence is seen (Figure 3a). This difference can be understood as the following. Although enhancement of semidiurnal and terdiurnal tides occurs at all altitudes during SSW, their magnitude is less than 2 K below 1 km but over K above it [Jin et al., 212]. Thus, the tidal signature (hence dependence) below 1 km is easily dominated by the zonal mean temperature changes and hard to be discerned in the total perturbation. The constant phase of the perturbation above 2 km altitude along with the downward propagation between 1 and 2 km seen in Figure 3a demonstrates the typical feature of an upward-propagating semidiurnal tides [Forbes, 1982]. [17] Second, due to the downward phase propagation, a rapid switch of SSW effects occurs near 15 km altitude above the equator (see Figures 3c and 3d). The switch direction depends on local time. It is from cooling below 15 km to warming above 15 km in sectors around 11 and 23, but in the opposite direction near 5 and 17. It would be interesting to compare these predictions with observations when available. [18] Third, GAIA reveals a global net cooling of approximately 12 K above 1 km, with a cooling rate of about.9 K/d during the SSW. At the moment, we do not have clear explanation for the rapid cooling during this period. However, one thing is clear that the seasonal variation cannot explain this. It is known that zonal mean temperature perturbations are largely caused by changes in the global circulation which are affected by various atmospheric waves [Matsuno, 1971; Liu and Roble, 22; Pancheva et al., 27]. Detailed analysis of the neutral wind, molecular diffusion, and ion drag in the GAIA simulation will be carried out to explore the underlying processes. In contrast to our result, a slight warming at 325 km altitude is reported by Fuller-Rowell et al. [211] using the Whole Atmosphere Model (WAM). This difference might be partly due to the fact that GAIA is an atmosphere-ionosphere coupled model, while WAM has no ionosphere included. However, closer examination is needed to clarify this. [19] In summary, the GAIA model has revealed distinct local time and altitude dependence of SSW impacts on the upper atmosphere throughout 1 4 km altitude. These features provide us an urgently needed global context to better connect and understand upper atmosphere observations during SSW events. [2] Acknowledgment. We thank S. Miyahara for helpful discussions and suggestions. References Forbes, J. M. (1982), Atmospheric tides 2. The solar and lunar semidiurnal components, J. Geophys. Res., 87, , doi:1.129/ja87ia7p5241. Fuller-Rowell, T., R. Akmaev, F. Wu, M. Fedrizzi, R. A. Viereck, and H. Wang (211), Did the January 29 sudden stratospheric warming cool or warm the thermosphere?, Geophys.Res.Lett., 38, L1814, doi:1.129/211gl Funke, B., M. López-Puertas, D. Bermejo-Pantaleón, M. García-Comas, G. P. Stiller, T. von Clarmann, M. Kiefer, and A. Linden (21), Evidence for dynamical coupling from the lower atmosphere to the thermosphere during a major stratospheric warming, Geophys. Res. Lett., 37, L1383, doi:1.129/21gl Goncharenko, L., and S. Zhang (28), Ionospheric signatures of sudden stratospheric warming: Ion temperature at middle latitude, Geophys. Res. Lett., 35, L2113, doi:1.129/28gl Goncharenko, L. P., J. L. Chau, H. Liu, and A. J. Coster (21), Unexpected connections between the stratosphere and ionosphere, Geophys. Res. Lett., 37, L111, doi:1.129/21gl Jin,H.,Y.Miyoshi,D.Pancheva,P.Mukhtarov,H.Fujiwara,andH. Shinagawa (212), Response of migrating tides to the stratospheric sudden warming in 29 and their effects on the ionosphere studied by a whole atmosphere-ionosphere model GAIA with COSMIC and TIMED/SABER observations, J. Geophys. Res., 117, A1323, doi:1.129/212ja1765. Liu, H., and R. G. Roble (22), A study of a self-generated stratospheric sudden warming and its mesospheric-lower thermospheric impacts using the coupled TIME-GCM/CCM3, J. Geophys. Res., 17, 4694, doi:1.129/ 21JD1533. Liu, H., E. Doornbos, M. Yamamoto, and S. Tulasi Ram (211), Strong thermospheric cooling during the 29 major stratosphere warming, Geophys. Res. Lett., 38, L1212, doi:1.129/211gl Matsuno, T. (1971), A dynamical model of the stratospheric sudden warming, J. Atmos. Sci., 28, Miyoshi, Y., and H. Fujiwara (23), Day-to-day variations of migrating diurnal tide simulated by a GCM from the ground surface to the exobase, Geophys. Res. Lett.,, 1789, doi:1.129/23gl Pancheva, D. V., P. J. Mukhtarov, and B. A. Andonov (27), Zonally symmetric oscillations in the Northern Hemisphere stratosphere during the winter of 23 24, Geophys. Res. Lett., 34, L487, doi:1.129/26gl

6 Schunk, R. W., and A. F. Nagy (2), Ionospheres: Physics, Plasma Physics, and Chemistry, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K. Stolle, C., and H. Liu (213), Low-latitude ionosphere and thermosphere: Decadal observations from the CHAMP mission, AGU Monograph, Modeling the Ionosphere-Thermosphere System, in press, doi:1.129/ 212GM1285. Yamazaki, Y., K. Yumoto, D. McNamara, T. Hirooka, T. Uozumi, K. Kitamura, S. Abe, and A. Ikeda (212), Ionospheric current system during sudden stratospheric warming events, J. Geophys. Res., 117, A3334, doi:1.129/211ja

Strong thermospheric cooling during the 2009 major stratosphere warming

Strong thermospheric cooling during the 2009 major stratosphere warming GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 38,, doi:10.1029/2011gl047898, 2011 Strong thermospheric cooling during the 2009 major stratosphere warming Huixin Liu, 1,2 Eelco Doornbos, 3 Mamoru Yamamoto, 4 and S.

More information

Numerical simulation of the equatorial wind jet in the thermosphere

Numerical simulation of the equatorial wind jet in the thermosphere JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117,, doi:10.1029/2011ja017373, 2012 Numerical simulation of the equatorial wind jet in the thermosphere Yasunobu Miyoshi, 1 Hitoshi Fujiwara, 2 Hidekatsu Jin, 3 Hiroyuki

More information

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117, A08326, doi: /2012ja017858, 2012

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117, A08326, doi: /2012ja017858, 2012 JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117,, doi:10.1029/2012ja017858, 2012 Simulations of solar and lunar tidal variability in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere during sudden stratosphere warmings

More information

Ionosphere Variability at Mid Latitudes during Sudden Stratosphere Warmings

Ionosphere Variability at Mid Latitudes during Sudden Stratosphere Warmings Ionosphere Variability at Mid Latitudes during Sudden Stratosphere Warmings Nick Pedatella 1 and Astrid Maute 2 1 COSMIC Program Office, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research 2 High Altitude

More information

Structure of Atmosphere. (University of Washington ESS, 2015)

Structure of Atmosphere. (University of Washington ESS, 2015) Structure of Atmosphere (University of Washington ESS, 2015) Motivation and Current State of Knowledge Spatial and temporal variations in ionospheric parameters cannot be explained by solar forcing Solid

More information

Influence of Sudden Stratosphere Warmings on the Ionosphere and Thermosphere

Influence of Sudden Stratosphere Warmings on the Ionosphere and Thermosphere Influence of Sudden Stratosphere Warmings on the Ionosphere and Thermosphere Nick Pedatella 1,2 1 High Altitude Observatory, National Center for Atmospheric Research 2 COSMIC Program Office, University

More information

Delineating the migrating solar and lunar semidiurnal atmospheric tides in general circulation models

Delineating the migrating solar and lunar semidiurnal atmospheric tides in general circulation models Delineating the migrating solar and lunar semidiurnal atmospheric tides in general circulation models Eryn Cangi, University of Oregon Dr. Astrid Maute, High Altitude Observatory LASP REU 27 July 2016

More information

First simulations with a whole atmosphere data assimilation and forecast system: The January 2009 major sudden stratospheric warming

First simulations with a whole atmosphere data assimilation and forecast system: The January 2009 major sudden stratospheric warming JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 116,, doi:10.1029/2011ja017081, 2011 First simulations with a whole atmosphere data assimilation and forecast system: The January 2009 major sudden stratospheric warming

More information

Dynamical coupling between the middle atmosphere and lower thermosphere

Dynamical coupling between the middle atmosphere and lower thermosphere Dynamical coupling between the middle atmosphere and lower thermosphere Anne Smith, Dan Marsh, Nick Pedatella NCAR* Tomoko Matsuo CIRES/NOAA NCAR is sponsored by the National Science Foundation Model runs

More information

Joule heating and nitric oxide in the thermosphere, 2

Joule heating and nitric oxide in the thermosphere, 2 JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115,, doi:10.1029/2010ja015565, 2010 Joule heating and nitric oxide in the thermosphere, 2 Charles A. Barth 1 Received 14 April 2010; revised 24 June 2010; accepted

More information

tidal variability in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) due to the El Niño Southern Oscillation

tidal variability in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) due to the El Niño Southern Oscillation GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 39,, doi:10.1029/2012gl053383, 2012 Tidal variability in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere due to the El Niño Southern Oscillation N. M. Pedatella 1 and H.-L. Liu

More information

High initial time sensitivity of medium range forecasting observed for a stratospheric sudden warming

High initial time sensitivity of medium range forecasting observed for a stratospheric sudden warming GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 37,, doi:10.1029/2010gl044119, 2010 High initial time sensitivity of medium range forecasting observed for a stratospheric sudden warming Yuhji Kuroda 1 Received 27 May

More information

Day-to-day variations of migrating semidiurnal tide in the mesosphere and thermosphere

Day-to-day variations of migrating semidiurnal tide in the mesosphere and thermosphere Mem. Natl Inst. Polar Res., Spec. Issue, /3, +33,*1,,**0,**0 National Institute of Polar Research Scientific paper Day-to-day variations of migrating semidiurnal tide in the mesosphere and thermosphere

More information

Dynamical. regions during sudden stratospheric warming event (Case study of 2009 and 2013 event)

Dynamical. regions during sudden stratospheric warming event (Case study of 2009 and 2013 event) Dynamical Coupling between high and low latitude regions during sudden stratospheric warming event (Case study of 2009 and 2013 event) Vinay Kumar 1,S. K. Dhaka 1,R. K. Choudhary 2,Shu-Peng Ho 3,M. Takahashi

More information

Responses of mesosphere and lower thermosphere temperatures to gravity wave forcing during stratospheric sudden warming

Responses of mesosphere and lower thermosphere temperatures to gravity wave forcing during stratospheric sudden warming Click Here for Full Article GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 37,, doi:10.1029/2009gl042351, 2010 Responses of mesosphere and lower thermosphere temperatures to gravity wave forcing during stratospheric

More information

Lunar Tide Effects on the Atmosphere during the 2013 Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) as Simulated by TIME- GCM

Lunar Tide Effects on the Atmosphere during the 2013 Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) as Simulated by TIME- GCM Lunar Tide Effects on the Atmosphere during the 2013 Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) as Simulated by TIME- GCM Jonathan Barta Whitworth University, Spokane, WA Astrid Maute High Al8tude Observatory

More information

Thermospheric temperature and density variations

Thermospheric temperature and density variations Solar and Stellar Variability: Impact on Earth and Planets Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 264, 2009 A. G. Kosovichev, A. H. Andrei & J.-P. Rozelot, eds. c International Astronomical Union 2010 doi:10.1017/s1743921309992857

More information

Analysis of Ultra-fast Kelvin Waves Simulated by the Kyushu University GCM

Analysis of Ultra-fast Kelvin Waves Simulated by the Kyushu University GCM Analysis of Ultra-fast Kelvin Waves Simulated by the Kyushu University GCM Ying-Wen Chen and Saburo Miyahara Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Kyushu University, Japan 1. Introduction Equatorial

More information

An observational and theoretical study of the longitudinal variation in neutral temperature induced by aurora heating in the lower thermosphere

An observational and theoretical study of the longitudinal variation in neutral temperature induced by aurora heating in the lower thermosphere JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: SPACE PHYSICS, VOL. 118, 741 7425, doi:1.12/213ja19144, 213 An observational and theoretical study of the longitudinal variation in neutral temperature induced by aurora

More information

Effect of sudden stratospheric warmingon lunar tidal modulation of the equatorial electrojet

Effect of sudden stratospheric warmingon lunar tidal modulation of the equatorial electrojet Utah State University From the SelectedWorks of Bela G. Fejer March 1, 2012 Effect of sudden stratospheric warmingon lunar tidal modulation of the equatorial electrojet J. Park H. Luhr M. Kunze Bela G.

More information

Stratospheric warmings and their effects in the ionosphere. L. Goncharenko, MIT Haystack Observatory

Stratospheric warmings and their effects in the ionosphere. L. Goncharenko, MIT Haystack Observatory Stratospheric warmings and their effects in the ionosphere L. Goncharenko, MIT Haystack Observatory Prize Lecture, CEDAR workshop, June 25, 2012 Unexplained behavior of the upper thermosphere and ionosphere

More information

First detection of wave interactions in the middle atmosphere of Mars

First detection of wave interactions in the middle atmosphere of Mars GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 38,, doi:10.1029/2010gl045592, 2011 First detection of wave interactions in the middle atmosphere of Mars Y. Moudden 1 and J. M. Forbes 1 Received 22 September 2010;

More information

Analysis and hindcast experiments of the 2009 sudden stratosphere warming in WACCMX+DART

Analysis and hindcast experiments of the 2009 sudden stratosphere warming in WACCMX+DART Analysis and hindcast experiments of the 2009 sudden stratosphere warming in WACCMX+DART Nick Pedatella 1,2, Hanli Liu 1, Daniel Marsh 1,3, Jeffrey Anderson 4, and Kevin Raeder 4 1 High Altitude Observatory,

More information

Equatorial counter electrojets and polar stratospheric sudden warmings a classical example of high latitude-low latitude coupling?

Equatorial counter electrojets and polar stratospheric sudden warmings a classical example of high latitude-low latitude coupling? Ann. Geophys., 27, 3147 3153, 9 www.ann-geophys.net/27/3147/9/ Author(s) 9. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3. License. Annales Geophysicae Equatorial counter electrojets

More information

Comparison of CHAMP and TIME-GCM nonmigrating tidal signals in the thermospheric zonal wind

Comparison of CHAMP and TIME-GCM nonmigrating tidal signals in the thermospheric zonal wind Click Here for Full Article JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115,, doi:10.1029/2009jd012394, 2010 Comparison of CHAMP and TIME-GCM nonmigrating tidal signals in the thermospheric zonal wind K. Häusler,

More information

Whole Atmosphere Simulation of Anthropogenic Climate Change

Whole Atmosphere Simulation of Anthropogenic Climate Change Whole Atmosphere Simulation of Anthropogenic Climate Change Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt High Altitude Observatory National Center for Atmospheric Research

More information

Lecture #1 Tidal Models. Charles McLandress (Banff Summer School 7-13 May 2005)

Lecture #1 Tidal Models. Charles McLandress (Banff Summer School 7-13 May 2005) Lecture #1 Tidal Models Charles McLandress (Banff Summer School 7-13 May 2005) 1 Outline of Lecture 1. Introduction 2. Brief description of tides 3. Observations of tides 4. Simulating tides using a general

More information

What kind of stratospheric sudden warming propagates to the troposphere?

What kind of stratospheric sudden warming propagates to the troposphere? What kind of stratospheric sudden warming propagates to the troposphere? Ken I. Nakagawa 1, and Koji Yamazaki 2 1 Sapporo District Meteorological Observatory, Japan Meteorological Agency Kita-2, Nishi-18,

More information

SOLAR ACTIVITY DEPENDENCE OF EFFECTIVE WINDS DERIVED FROM IONOSPHERIC DATAAT WUHAN

SOLAR ACTIVITY DEPENDENCE OF EFFECTIVE WINDS DERIVED FROM IONOSPHERIC DATAAT WUHAN Pergamon wwwelseviercom/locate/asi doi: 1,116/SO27-1177()678-l Available online at wwwsciencedirectcom SClENCE DIRECT SOLAR ACTIVITY DEPENDENCE OF EFFECTIVE WINDS DERIVED FROM IONOSPHERIC DATAAT WUHAN

More information

Tidal Coupling in the Earth s Atmosphere. Maura Hagan NCAR High Altitude Observatory

Tidal Coupling in the Earth s Atmosphere. Maura Hagan NCAR High Altitude Observatory Tidal Coupling in the Earth s Atmosphere Maura Hagan NCAR High Altitude Observatory OUTLINE Motivation - Observations Tidal Nomenclature/Characteristics/Sources Results from the Global-Scale Wave Model

More information

2014 Utah NASA Space Grant Consortium Symposium 1

2014 Utah NASA Space Grant Consortium Symposium 1 2014 Utah NASA Space Grant Consortium Symposium 1 Rayleigh Scatter Lidar Observations of the Midlatitude Mesosphere's Response to Sudden Stratospheric Warmings Leda Sox 1, Vincent B. Wickwar 1, Chad Fish

More information

SCIENCE CHINA Technological Sciences

SCIENCE CHINA Technological Sciences SCIENCE CHINA Technological Sciences RESEARCH PAPER May 2012 Vol.55 No.5: 1258 1263 doi: 10.1007/s11431-012-4802-0 Longitudinal distribution of O 2 nightglow brightness observed by TIEMD/SABER satellite

More information

Middle and upper thermosphere density structures due to nonmigrating tides

Middle and upper thermosphere density structures due to nonmigrating tides JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117,, doi:10.1029/2012ja018087, 2012 Middle and upper thermosphere density structures due to nonmigrating tides Jeffrey M. Forbes, 1 Xiaoli Zhang, 1 and Sean Bruinsma

More information

HEIGHT-LATITUDE STRUCTURE OF PLANETARY WAVES IN THE STRATOSPHERE AND TROPOSPHERE. V. Guryanov, A. Fahrutdinova, S. Yurtaeva

HEIGHT-LATITUDE STRUCTURE OF PLANETARY WAVES IN THE STRATOSPHERE AND TROPOSPHERE. V. Guryanov, A. Fahrutdinova, S. Yurtaeva HEIGHT-LATITUDE STRUCTURE OF PLANETARY WAVES IN THE STRATOSPHERE AND TROPOSPHERE INTRODUCTION V. Guryanov, A. Fahrutdinova, S. Yurtaeva Kazan State University, Kazan, Russia When constructing empirical

More information

Thermosperic wind response to geomagnetic activity in the low latitudes during the 2004 Equinox seasons

Thermosperic wind response to geomagnetic activity in the low latitudes during the 2004 Equinox seasons Available online at www.pelagiaresearchlibrary.com Advances in Applied Science Research, 211, 2 (6):563-569 ISSN: 976-861 CODEN (USA): AASRFC Thermosperic wind response to geomagnetic activity in the low

More information

Simulated equinoctial asymmetry of the ionospheric vertical plasma drifts

Simulated equinoctial asymmetry of the ionospheric vertical plasma drifts JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117,, doi:10.1029/2011ja016952, 2012 Simulated equinoctial asymmetry of the ionospheric vertical plasma drifts Zhipeng Ren, 1 Weixing Wan, 1 Jiangang Xiong, 1 and

More information

Sun synchronous thermal tides in exosphere temperature from CHAMP and GRACE accelerometer measurements

Sun synchronous thermal tides in exosphere temperature from CHAMP and GRACE accelerometer measurements JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 116,, doi:10.1029/2011ja016855, 2011 Sun synchronous thermal tides in exosphere temperature from CHAMP and GRACE accelerometer measurements Jeffrey M. Forbes, 1 Xiaoli

More information

Solar Forcing of the Thermosphere and Ionosphere from below: Coupling via Neutral Wave Dynamics Dave Fritts and Ruth Lieberman, NorthWest Research

Solar Forcing of the Thermosphere and Ionosphere from below: Coupling via Neutral Wave Dynamics Dave Fritts and Ruth Lieberman, NorthWest Research Solar Forcing of the Thermosphere and Ionosphere from below: Coupling via Neutral Wave Dynamics Dave Fritts and Ruth Lieberman, NorthWest Research Assoc., and Bela Fejer, Utah State Univ. Executive Summary

More information

Thermospheric Winds. Astrid Maute. High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Science (NCAR) Boulder CO, USA

Thermospheric Winds. Astrid Maute. High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Science (NCAR) Boulder CO, USA Thermospheric Winds Astrid Maute High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Science (NCAR) Boulder CO, USA High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Research

More information

A decade-long climatology of terdiurnal tides using TIMED/SABER observations

A decade-long climatology of terdiurnal tides using TIMED/SABER observations JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: SPACE PHYSICS, VOL. 8,, doi:./jgra.7, A decade-long climatology of terdiurnal using TIMED/SABER observations Y. Moudden and J. M. Forbes Received October ; revised 8 April

More information

Wave-driven equatorial annual oscillation induced and modulated by the solar cycle

Wave-driven equatorial annual oscillation induced and modulated by the solar cycle GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 32, L20811, doi:10.1029/2005gl023090, 2005 Wave-driven equatorial annual oscillation induced and modulated by the solar cycle Hans G. Mayr, 1 John G. Mengel, 2 and Charles

More information

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115, A05308, doi: /2009ja014894, 2010

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115, A05308, doi: /2009ja014894, 2010 Click Here for Full Article JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115,, doi:10.1029/2009ja014894, 2010 Modeling of multiple effects of atmospheric tides on the ionosphere: An examination of possible coupling

More information

Lunar tide in the equatorial electrojet in relation to stratospheric warmings

Lunar tide in the equatorial electrojet in relation to stratospheric warmings JOURAL O GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 116,, doi:1.129/211ja1747, 211 Lunar tide in the equatorial electrojet in relation to stratospheric warmings R. J. Stening 1 Received 4 August 211; revised 27 September

More information

Recurrent Geomagnetic Activity Driving a Multi-Day Response in the Thermosphere and Ionosphere

Recurrent Geomagnetic Activity Driving a Multi-Day Response in the Thermosphere and Ionosphere Recurrent Geomagnetic Activity Driving a Multi-Day Response in the Thermosphere and Ionosphere Jeff Thayer Associate Professor Aerospace Engineering Sciences Department University of Colorado Collaborators:

More information

Tropical stratospheric zonal winds in ECMWF ERA-40 reanalysis, rocketsonde data, and rawinsonde data

Tropical stratospheric zonal winds in ECMWF ERA-40 reanalysis, rocketsonde data, and rawinsonde data GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 32, L09806, doi:10.1029/2004gl022328, 2005 Tropical stratospheric zonal winds in ECMWF ERA-40 reanalysis, rocketsonde data, and rawinsonde data Mark P. Baldwin Northwest

More information

Intra-annual variation of wave number 4 structure of vertical E B drifts in the equatorial ionosphere seen from ROCSAT-1

Intra-annual variation of wave number 4 structure of vertical E B drifts in the equatorial ionosphere seen from ROCSAT-1 Click Here for Full Article JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 114,, doi:10.1029/2009ja014060, 2009 Intra-annual variation of wave number 4 structure of vertical E B drifts in the equatorial ionosphere

More information

Neutral Winds in the Upper Atmosphere. Qian Wu National Center for Atmospheric Research

Neutral Winds in the Upper Atmosphere. Qian Wu National Center for Atmospheric Research Neutral Winds in the Upper Atmosphere Qian Wu National Center for Atmospheric Research Outline Overview of the upper atmosphere. Ozone heating. Neutral wind tides (the strongest dynamic feature). Why do

More information

The terdiurnal tide in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere over Wuhan (30 N, 114 E)

The terdiurnal tide in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere over Wuhan (30 N, 114 E) Earth Planets Space, 57, 393 398, 2005 The terdiurnal tide in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere over Wuhan (30 N, 114 E) Guangxin Zhao 1,2,3, Libo Liu 1, Baiqi Ning 1, Weixing Wan 1, and Jiangang Xiong

More information

Variations of Ion Drifts in the Ionosphere at Low- and Mid- Latitudes

Variations of Ion Drifts in the Ionosphere at Low- and Mid- Latitudes Variations of Ion Drifts in the Ionosphere at Low- and Mid- Latitudes Edgardo E. Pacheco Jicamarca Radio Observatory Jul, 2014 Outline Motivation Introduction to Ionospheric Electrodynamics Objectives

More information

CHAPTER 5. Low latitude temperature change in the stratosphere and mesosphere. relation to Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW)

CHAPTER 5. Low latitude temperature change in the stratosphere and mesosphere. relation to Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) CHAPTER 5 Low latitude temperature change in the stratosphere and mesosphere relation to Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) 5.1 Introduction To understand middle atmosphere dynamics, the basic thermal

More information

Wind and temperature response of midlatitude mesopause region to the 2009 Sudden Stratospheric Warming

Wind and temperature response of midlatitude mesopause region to the 2009 Sudden Stratospheric Warming JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117,, doi:10.1029/2011jd017142, 2012 Wind and temperature response of midlatitude mesopause region to the 2009 Sudden Stratospheric Warming Tao Yuan, 1 B. Thurairajah,

More information

Dynamics of the Thermosphere

Dynamics of the Thermosphere Dynamics of the Thermosphere Jeffrey M. Forbes, University of Colorado http://spot.colorado.edu/~forbes/home.html http://sisko.colorado.edu/forbes/asen5335/ ASEN5335 Aerospace Environment: Space Weather

More information

Overview of Middle Atmosphere Tides. R. S. Lieberman Northwest Research Associates, Inc. Colorado Research Associates Division Boulder, CO

Overview of Middle Atmosphere Tides. R. S. Lieberman Northwest Research Associates, Inc. Colorado Research Associates Division Boulder, CO Overview of Middle Atmosphere Tides R. S. Lieberman Northwest Research Associates, Inc. Colorado Research Associates Division Boulder, CO What are atmospheric tides? Global-scale oscillations, periods

More information

Traveling planetary-scale Rossby waves in the winter stratosphere: The role of tropospheric baroclinic instability

Traveling planetary-scale Rossby waves in the winter stratosphere: The role of tropospheric baroclinic instability GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 39,, doi:10.1029/2012gl053684, 2012 Traveling planetary-scale Rossby waves in the winter stratosphere: The role of tropospheric baroclinic instability Daniela I. V. Domeisen

More information

Thermosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model

Thermosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115,, doi:10.1029/2010ja015586, 2010 Thermosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model H. L. Liu, 1 B. T. Foster, 1 M. E. Hagan, 1 J. M. McInerney,

More information

On the relationship between atomic oxygen and vertical shifts between OH Meinel bands originating from different vibrational levels

On the relationship between atomic oxygen and vertical shifts between OH Meinel bands originating from different vibrational levels GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 40, 5821 5825, doi:10.1002/2013gl058017, 2013 On the relationship between atomic oxygen and vertical shifts between OH Meinel bands originating from different vibrational

More information

Modeling the Downward Influence of Stratospheric Final Warming events

Modeling the Downward Influence of Stratospheric Final Warming events Modeling the Downward Influence of Stratospheric Final Warming events Lantao Sun Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Walter A. Robinson Division of Atmospheric

More information

New perspectives on thermosphere tides: 2. Penetration to the upper thermosphere

New perspectives on thermosphere tides: 2. Penetration to the upper thermosphere Forbes et al. Earth, Planets and Space 2014, 66:122 FULL PAPER Open Access New perspectives on thermosphere tides: 2. Penetration to the upper thermosphere Jeffrey M Forbes 1*, Xiaoli Zhang 1 and Sean

More information

Gravity wave variations during the 2009 stratospheric sudden

Gravity wave variations during the 2009 stratospheric sudden GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 37,, doi:10.109/010gl045437, 010 Gravity wave variations during the 009 stratospheric sudden warming as revealed by ECMWF T799 and observations Chihoko Yamashita, 1,

More information

Nonmigrating tidal activity related to the sudden stratospheric warming in the Arctic winter of 2003/2004

Nonmigrating tidal activity related to the sudden stratospheric warming in the Arctic winter of 2003/2004 Ann. Geophys., 7, 97 97, 9 www.ann-geophys.net/7/97/9/ Author(s) 9. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution. License. Annales Geophysicae Nonmigrating tidal activity related to

More information

On the remarkable Arctic winter in 2008/2009

On the remarkable Arctic winter in 2008/2009 JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 114,, doi:10.1029/2009jd012273, 2009 On the remarkable Arctic winter in 2008/2009 K. Labitzke 1 and M. Kunze 1 Received 17 April 2009; revised 11 June 2009; accepted

More information

A new perspective on gravity waves in the Martian atmosphere: Sources and features

A new perspective on gravity waves in the Martian atmosphere: Sources and features JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 116,, doi:10.1029/2011je003800, 2011 A new perspective on gravity waves in the Martian atmosphere: Sources and features Y. Miyoshi, 1 J. M. Forbes, 2 and Y. Moudden

More information

The lower thermosphere during the northern hemisphere winter of 2009: A modeling study using high-altitude data assimilation products in WACCM-X

The lower thermosphere during the northern hemisphere winter of 2009: A modeling study using high-altitude data assimilation products in WACCM-X JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: ATMOSPHERES, VOL. 118, 8954 8968, doi:1.2/jgrd.5632, 213 The lower thermosphere during the northern hemisphere winter of 29: A modeling study using high-altitude data assimilation

More information

Seasonal and longitudinal dependence of equatorialdisturbance vertical plasma drifts

Seasonal and longitudinal dependence of equatorialdisturbance vertical plasma drifts Utah State University From the SelectedWorks of Bela G. Fejer October 1, 2008 Seasonal and longitudinal dependence of equatorialdisturbance vertical plasma drifts Bela G. Fejer, Utah State University J.

More information

Effects of thermal tides on the Venus atmospheric superrotation

Effects of thermal tides on the Venus atmospheric superrotation JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 112,, doi:10.1029/2006jd007901, 2007 Effects of thermal tides on the Venus atmospheric superrotation M. Takagi 1 and Y. Matsuda 2 Received 10 August 2006; revised

More information

Eliassen-Palm Fluxes of the Diurnal Tides from the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model-Extended (WACCM-X) McArthur Mack Jones Jr.

Eliassen-Palm Fluxes of the Diurnal Tides from the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model-Extended (WACCM-X) McArthur Mack Jones Jr. Eliassen-Palm Fluxes of the Diurnal Tides from the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model-Extended (WACCM-X) ABSTRACT McArthur Mack Jones Jr. Academic Affiliation, Fall 2009: Senior, Millersville University

More information

Modulation of the Semiannual Oscillation Induced by Sudden Stratospheric Warming Events

Modulation of the Semiannual Oscillation Induced by Sudden Stratospheric Warming Events ISWA2016@ Tokyo, Japan 14/Oct/2016 1 Modulation of the Semiannual Oscillation Induced by Sudden Stratospheric Warming Events Toshihiko Hirooka¹, *Tsuyoshi Ohata¹, Nawo Eguchi² 1 DEPS, Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka,

More information

Calculated and observed climate change in the thermosphere, and a prediction for solar cycle 24

Calculated and observed climate change in the thermosphere, and a prediction for solar cycle 24 Click Here for Full Article GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 33, L23705, doi:10.1029/2006gl027185, 2006 Calculated and observed climate change in the thermosphere, and a prediction for solar cycle 24

More information

The stratospheric response to extratropical torques and its relationship with the annular mode

The stratospheric response to extratropical torques and its relationship with the annular mode The stratospheric response to extratropical torques and its relationship with the annular mode Peter Watson 1, Lesley Gray 1,2 1. Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics, Oxford University 2. National

More information

Dynamical and Thermal Effects of Gravity Waves in the Terrestrial Thermosphere-Ionosphere

Dynamical and Thermal Effects of Gravity Waves in the Terrestrial Thermosphere-Ionosphere 1/25 Dynamical and Thermal Effects of Gravity Waves in the Terrestrial Thermosphere-Ionosphere Erdal Yiğit 1,3, Alexander S. Medvedev 2, and Aaron J. Ridley 1 1 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA 2

More information

Gravity waves in the equatorial thermosphere and their relation to lower atmospheric variability

Gravity waves in the equatorial thermosphere and their relation to lower atmospheric variability Earth Planets Space, 61, 471 478, 2009 Gravity waves in the equatorial thermosphere and their relation to lower atmospheric variability Yasunobu Miyoshi 1 and Hitoshi Fujiwara 2 1 Department of Earth and

More information

Vertical coupling of atmospheres: dependence on strength of sudden stratospheric warming and solar activity

Vertical coupling of atmospheres: dependence on strength of sudden stratospheric warming and solar activity Laskar et al. Earth, Planets and Space 2014, 66:94 FULL PAPER Open Access Vertical coupling of atmospheres: dependence on strength of sudden stratospheric warming and solar activity Fazlul I Laskar 1,2*,

More information

PUBLICATIONS. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. Low-latitude scintillation weakening during sudden stratospheric warming events

PUBLICATIONS. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. Low-latitude scintillation weakening during sudden stratospheric warming events PUBLICATIONS Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics RESEARCH ARTICLE Key Points: Ionospheric scintillation Lunar tide effects over scintillation Vertical plasma drift and thermospheric wind Correspondence

More information

7 The Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO)

7 The Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO) 7 The Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO) (Reviewed by Baldwin et al., Rev. Geophys., 001) Previously we noted the remarkable quasi-periodic reversal of zonal winds in the tropical stratosphere, the quasi-biennial

More information

The North Atlantic Oscillation: Climatic Significance and Environmental Impact

The North Atlantic Oscillation: Climatic Significance and Environmental Impact 1 The North Atlantic Oscillation: Climatic Significance and Environmental Impact James W. Hurrell National Center for Atmospheric Research Climate and Global Dynamics Division, Climate Analysis Section

More information

Upper mesosphere and lower thermospheric wind response to a severe storm in the equatorial latitudes

Upper mesosphere and lower thermospheric wind response to a severe storm in the equatorial latitudes Available online at www.pelagiaresearchlibrary.com Advances in Applied Science Research, 212, 3 (6):3831-3843 ISSN: 976-861 CODEN (USA): AASRFC Upper mesosphere and lower thermospheric wind response to

More information

Medium- to large-scale density variability as observed by CHAMP

Medium- to large-scale density variability as observed by CHAMP SPACE WEATHER, VOL. 6,, doi:10.1029/2008sw000411, 2008 Medium- to large-scale density variability as observed by CHAMP Sean L. Bruinsma 1 and Jeffrey M. Forbes 2 Received 5 May 2008; revised 6 June 2008;

More information

Impact of COSMIC observations in a whole atmosphere-ionosphere data assimilation model

Impact of COSMIC observations in a whole atmosphere-ionosphere data assimilation model Impact of COSMIC observations in a whole atmosphere-ionosphere data assimilation model Nick Pedatella 1,2, Hanli Liu 1, Jing Liu 1, Jeffrey Anderson 3, and Kevin Raeder 3 1 High Altitude Observatory, NCAR

More information

THERMOSPHERIC TIDES DURING THERMOSPHERE MAPPING STUDY PERIODS

THERMOSPHERIC TIDES DURING THERMOSPHERE MAPPING STUDY PERIODS Adv. Space Res. Vot. 7, No. 10, pp. (10)277 (10)283, 1987 0273 1177/87 $0.t~+.50 Printed in Great Britain. All rights reserved. Copyright 1987 COSPAR THERMOSPHERIC TIDES DURING THERMOSPHERE MAPPING STUDY

More information

The Earth s thermosphere and coupling to the Sun:

The Earth s thermosphere and coupling to the Sun: The Earth s thermosphere and coupling to the Sun: Does the stratosphere and troposphere care? Alan D Aylward, George Millward, Ingo Muller-Wodarg and Matthew Harris Atmospheric Physics Laboratory, Dept

More information

Thermosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model

Thermosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115,, doi:10.1029/2010ja015586, 2010 Thermosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model H. L. Liu, 1 B. T. Foster, 1 M. E. Hagan, 1 J. M. McInerney,

More information

The Equatorial Ionosphere: A Tutorial

The Equatorial Ionosphere: A Tutorial The Equatorial Ionosphere: A Tutorial Bela G. Fejer Center for Atmospheric and Space Science Utah State University Logan, Utah CEDAR Meeting Seattle, WA June 2015 The Equatorial Ionosphere Outline Introduction

More information

Tides in the Polar Mesosphere Derived from Two MF Radar Measurements at Poker Flat and Tromsø

Tides in the Polar Mesosphere Derived from Two MF Radar Measurements at Poker Flat and Tromsø Tides in the Polar Mesosphere Derived from Two MF Radar Measurements at Poker Flat and Tromsø NOZAWA Satonori, IWAHASHI Hiroyuki, TSUDA Takuo, OHYAMA Shin-ichiro, FUJII Ryoichi, Chris M. HALL, Alan MANSON,

More information

COE CST Fourth Annual Technical Meeting: Mitigating threats through space environment modeling/prediction

COE CST Fourth Annual Technical Meeting: Mitigating threats through space environment modeling/prediction COE CST Fourth Annual Technical Meeting: Mitigating threats through space environment modeling/prediction PI: Tim Fuller-Rowell Student: Catalin Negrea Washington, DC Overview Team Members Motivation Task

More information

Effect of the altitudinal variation of the gravitational acceleration on the thermosphere simulation

Effect of the altitudinal variation of the gravitational acceleration on the thermosphere simulation JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 113,, doi:10.1029/2008ja013081, 2008 Effect of the altitudinal variation of the gravitational acceleration on the thermosphere simulation Yue Deng, 1 Aaron J. Ridley,

More information

The Mid-Latitude Mesosphere s Response to Sudden Stratospheric Warmings as Determined from Rayleigh Lidar Temperatures

The Mid-Latitude Mesosphere s Response to Sudden Stratospheric Warmings as Determined from Rayleigh Lidar Temperatures Utah State University From the SelectedWorks of Leda Sox August 26, 2013 The Mid-Latitude Mesosphere s Response to Sudden Stratospheric Warmings as Determined from Rayleigh Lidar Temperatures Leda Sox,

More information

Variations of the nighttime thermospheric mass density at low and middle latitudes

Variations of the nighttime thermospheric mass density at low and middle latitudes JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115,, doi:10.1029/2010ja015784, 2010 Variations of the nighttime thermospheric mass density at low and middle latitudes Ruiping Ma, 1 Jiyao Xu, 1 Wenbin Wang, 2 Jiuhou

More information

Latitudinal wave coupling of the stratosphere and mesosphere during the major stratospheric warming in 2003/2004

Latitudinal wave coupling of the stratosphere and mesosphere during the major stratospheric warming in 2003/2004 Ann. Geophys.,, 3, www.ann-geophys.net//// European Geosciences Union Annales Geophysicae Latitudinal wave coupling of the stratosphere and mesosphere during the major stratospheric warming in 3/ D. Pancheva

More information

WACCM-X Simulations of Climate Change in the Upper Atmosphere Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt

WACCM-X Simulations of Climate Change in the Upper Atmosphere Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt WACCM-X Simulations of Climate Change in the Upper Atmosphere Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt High Altitude Observatory National Center for Atmospheric

More information

Vertical Structure of Atmosphere

Vertical Structure of Atmosphere ATMOS 3110 Introduction to Atmospheric Sciences Distribution of atmospheric mass and gaseous constituents Because of the earth s gravitational field, the atmosphere exerts a downward forces on the earth

More information

Characteristics of Wave Induced Oscillations in Mesospheric O2 Emission Intensity and Temperature

Characteristics of Wave Induced Oscillations in Mesospheric O2 Emission Intensity and Temperature Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU All Physics Faculty Publications Physics 1-2006 Characteristics of Wave Induced Oscillations in Mesospheric O2 Emission Intensity and Temperature A. Taori Michael

More information

Observations of the vertical ion drift in the equatorial ionosphere during the solar minimum period of 2009

Observations of the vertical ion drift in the equatorial ionosphere during the solar minimum period of 2009 Utah State University From the SelectedWorks of Bela G. Fejer December, 2011 Observations of the vertical ion drift in the equatorial ionosphere during the solar minimum period of 2009 R. A. Stoneback

More information

Investigating the Weddell Sea Anomaly using TIE- GCM

Investigating the Weddell Sea Anomaly using TIE- GCM Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU Physics Capstone Project Physics Student Research 5-16-2017 Investigating the Weddell Sea Anomaly using TIE- GCM DaeSean K. Jones Utah State University Follow this

More information

Interannual Variability of the Wintertime Polar Vortex in the Northern Hemisphere Middle Stratosphere1

Interannual Variability of the Wintertime Polar Vortex in the Northern Hemisphere Middle Stratosphere1 February 1982 j. M. Wallace and Fong-Chiau Chang 149 Interannual Variability of the Wintertime Polar Vortex in the Northern Hemisphere Middle Stratosphere1 By John M. Wallace and Fong-Chiau Chang Department

More information

Lower and Upper thermosphere wind variations during magnetically quiet

Lower and Upper thermosphere wind variations during magnetically quiet Lower and Upper thermosphere wind variations during magnetically quiet days. W.T. Sivla and H. McCreadie School of Chemistry and Physics, University of Kwazulu-Natal, P/Bag X54001, Abstract. Durban 4000,

More information

Coupling of the polar stratosphere and mesosphere during stratospheric sudden warmings - Relevance for solar-terrestrial coupling -

Coupling of the polar stratosphere and mesosphere during stratospheric sudden warmings - Relevance for solar-terrestrial coupling - Coupling of the polar stratosphere and mesosphere during stratospheric sudden warmings - Relevance for solar-terrestrial coupling - Yvan J. Orsolini NILU - Norwegian Institute for Air Research and Birkeland

More information

Wavenumber-4 patterns of the total electron content over the low latitude ionosphere

Wavenumber-4 patterns of the total electron content over the low latitude ionosphere Click Here for Full Article GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 35, L12104, doi:10.1029/2008gl033755, 2008 Wavenumber-4 patterns of the total electron content over the low latitude ionosphere W. Wan, 1

More information

Equinoctial asymmetry of ionospheric vertical plasma drifts and its effect on F region plasma density

Equinoctial asymmetry of ionospheric vertical plasma drifts and its effect on F region plasma density JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 116,, doi:10.1029/2010ja016081, 2011 Equinoctial asymmetry of ionospheric vertical plasma drifts and its effect on F region plasma density Zhipeng Ren, 1 Weixing Wan,

More information

The Met Office Unified Model and its extension to the thermosphere

The Met Office Unified Model and its extension to the thermosphere The Met Office Unified Model and its extension to the thermosphere David Jackson UK-Germany National Astronomy Meeting NAM2012, Manchester 26-30/03/2012 Overview What is the UM? Motivation for coupled

More information

Solar-terrestrial coupling evidenced by periodic behavior in geomagnetic indexes and the infrared energy budget of the thermosphere

Solar-terrestrial coupling evidenced by periodic behavior in geomagnetic indexes and the infrared energy budget of the thermosphere GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 35, L05808, doi:10.1029/2007gl032620, 2008 Solar-terrestrial coupling evidenced by periodic behavior in geomagnetic indexes and the infrared energy budget of the thermosphere

More information