首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Measurements of winds in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere were carried out during the main phase of the MAP/WINE project in January and February 1984 with the EISCAT UHF incoherent scatter radar near Tromsö, Norway, and with meteorological rockets launched from the Andøya Rocket Range, Norway. The radar measurements yield wind profiles between the altitudes of about 80 km and 105 km and the rockets between about 60 km and 90 km. Results from both techniques are combined to yield mean profiles which are particularly evaluated in terms of tidal variations. It is found that the semidiurnal tide constitutes an essential wind contribution between 85 km and 105 km. Whereas the tidal amplitudes are below 5 m s−1 at about 80 km, they increase to 20–30 m s−1 at 100 km. The average vertical wavelength of 35 km points to the S42 mode, but coupling and superposition of different modes cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

2.
Lunar and solar semidiurnal tides have been determined from winds measurements in the 82 to 100 km height range at Christchurch and Scott Base made during 1983–1984. At Christchurch, the solar tide has maximum amplitudes in April and December, while at Scott Base, only the December maximum is present at all heights. Phases at Scott base mostly agree with those measured earlier at Mawson, but vertical wavelengths are always long. The lunar tide was difficult to isolate at Christchurch, but the winter to summer phase reversal was clear. This was also seen at Scott Base.  相似文献   

3.
The semidiurnal tidal dynamics of the Antarctic and Arctic mesopause regions (95 ± 15 km) are investigated through comparative analyses of monthly mean tidal wind fields determined from radar measurements at the Scott Base (78°S), Molodezhnaya (68°S), and Mawson (67°S) stations in the Antarctic, and the near-conjugate stations of Heiss I. (81°N) and Poker Flat (65°) in the Arctic region. The main feature common to all stations is the fall equinoctial maximum in amplitude (10–20 m s−1), which is also reproduced by the most recent numerical tidal model. However, the wintertime amplitude growth with height and the shorter vertical wavelengths characterizing the model are features not reflected in the data. There is also a spring equinoctial maximum in the Antarctic data which the model does not reproduce.Examination of interannual variability reveals characteristics similar to those noted in Part I for the mean zonal wind; namely, some degree of year-to-year variability superimposed on apparent long-term decreases of order 0.3–0.5 m s−1 yr−1 (depending on month) in the Southern Hemisphere semidiurnal tidal amplitudes. Numerical simulations presented herein indicate that changes of this magnitude cannot even be induced (via mode coupling) by a change in the mean zonal wind field of order 30%, and are more plausibly explained by a secular change in the tidal forcing by ozone insolation absorption. However, contrary to Part I, the annual mean tidal amplitude is not characterized by any significant secular trend, remaining within the 10.0 ± 2.5 m s−1 range throughout the 1970–1986 period. Analyses of other data sets are required to ascertain confidence in the apparent trend reported here.  相似文献   

4.
Observations with the Poker Flat, Alaska, MST radar during and after solar proton events in 1982 and 1984 suggest that winds in the altitude range of ~ 80–90 km were altered as a consequence of the influx of energetic charged particles and large electric fields at high latitudes. The atmospheric changes accompanying these events appear to result in a reduction of the semidiurnal tide and an enhancement in the diurnal tide. It is suggested that these changes could result from the alteration of the local tidal heating distribution produced by the particle precipitation, either through changes in the local ozone distribution or as a result of mesospheric Joule heating.  相似文献   

5.
We present the results of MF radar observations of mean winds and waves in the height range 78–108 km at Mawson (67°S, 63°E), Antarctica. The measurements were made in the period from 1984 to 1990. Climatologies of the prevailing zonal and meridional circulations made with a 12-day time resolution show that the mean circulation remained relatively stable over the 6 yr of observation. Climatologies of gravity-wave motions in the 1–24 h period range were also generated. These reveal that the r.m.s. amplitudes of horizontal wave motions near the mesopause (~90 km) are about 30 m s−1, and that there is some anisotropy in the motions, especially at heights below 90 km. Meridional amplitudes are larger than zonal amplitudes, which suggests a preference for wave propagation in the north-south direction. Comparisons with MST radar wind observations made near the summer solstice at Poker Flat, Alaska (65°N) and at Andøya, Norway (69°N) show similarities with the Mawson observations, but the wave amplitudes and mean motions are larger in magnitude at the northern sites. This suggests hemispheric differences in wave activity that require further study.  相似文献   

6.
This paper examines the feasibility of deriving a climatology of the diurnal variations of the wind in the 85–120 km region from the tidal components of temperature, density, and composition contained in the new COSPAR International Reference Atmosphere, CIRA-1986, Part I: Thermosphere Models [(1988), Adv. Space Res.8, 9]. To derive the wind field, we used the zonal and meridional momentum equations which have been modified from the characteristic scales of the tidal components observed in the 85–120 km region. The CIRA temperature and density model was used to derive the eastward (westerly) and northward (southerly) pressure gradient forces which serve as the forcing functions in the coupled momentum equations. Ground-based wind data from the Mesosphere-Lower Thermosphere (MLT) radar network is used as an independent data set to check the accuracy of the derived tidal wind model. At midlatitudes, the model reproduces some of the general features observed in the radar tidal data, such as the dominant semidiurnal tide with increasing amplitude with height and clockwise (counterclockwise) rotation of the velocity vector observed in the northern (southern) hemisphere. The model overestimates the semidiurnal amplitudes observed by radar by 50–75% during most seasons with the best agreement found during the equinoctial months. The model exhibits little phase variation with height or season, whereas the radar data exhibit a downward phase progression during most seasons (other than summer) characteristic of upward propagating tidal waves, and large seasonal phase variations associated with seasonal changes in vertical wavelengths. The diurnal tidal amplitudes, which are generally 5–20 m s−1 at mid-latitude radar stations and are dominant over the semidiurnal amplitudes at lower latitudes, are less than 5 m s−1 at all latitudes in the model.  相似文献   

7.
As part of the MAP/WINE campaign (winter 1983–1984) and the MAC/SINE campaign (summer 1987) high resolution wind profiles were obtained in the upper mesosphere using the foil cloud technique. Vertical winds were derived from the fall rate of the foil clouds and are used for estimating the momentum fluxes associated with vertical wavelengths shorter than about 10 km. From the ensemble average of 15 observations over an altitude range of 74–89 km we calculate a zonal net momentum flux of +12.6 ± 4.5 m2s−2 in summer. The average of 14 measurements in winter between 73 and 85 km indicates a zonal net momentum flux of −3.7 ± 2.4 m22 s−2.  相似文献   

8.
Mean winds at 82–106 km altitude have been almost continuously monitored by the Kyoto meteor radar over the period from May 1983 to December 1985. The mean zonal wind becomes eastward with amplitudes as large as 30 m s−1 in the summer months (May–August), maximizing early in July at 95 km altitude, while it is less than 10 m s−1 at all the observed altitudes during the equinoxes. It is normally eastward in winter at low altitudes, although it sometimes becomes westward during sudden stratospheric warmings. The mean meridional wind is usually equatorward and is weaker than the zonal component. A southward wind exceeding 10 m s−1 is detected in July and August. The observed mean winds are compared with the CIRA 1972 model and coincidences with sudden warmings of changes in zonal wind direction are pointed out.  相似文献   

9.
Simultaneous measurements were made using a 2.66 MHz interferometer radar, infrared photometers, and imaging systems during the total lunar eclipse of 6 July 1982. The radar data showed that a series of six discrete scatterers passed overhead at 103 km with an average spacing of 54 min, and two passed overhead at 88 km, also 54 min apart. The 88 km events were approximately 27 min out of phase with those at 103 km. One of the 88 km events was examined in detail; the radar returns appeared to come from a single scatterer or a few clustered scatterers, with a velocity of 135 m s−1 almost due south, at 6° below the horizontal. The speed and period give a horizontal wavelength of 440 km, and the phase shift between 88 and 103 km activity suggests a 30 km vertical wavelength, in agreement with values for typical medium-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs). Infrared images were made in the near infrared, and photometric measurements were made on and off the 8−3 band of OH. These observations, made from one site near the radar and a second site 575 km south, showed wavelike structures appearing first over the radar, then further south until they filled most of the sky. The speed of development of the infrared structure pattern in the sky is consistent with the 135 m s−1 southward wave speed observed by the radar, but the structures themselves appeared in place, then drifted slowly northward at 10 m s−1. The photographically determined wavelengths were 30–60 km, considerably shorter than the 440 km determined with the radar.  相似文献   

10.
Mean winds at 60–90 km altitudes observed with the MU radar (35°N, 136°E) in 1985–1989 are presented in this paper. The zonal wind at 70 km became westward and eastward in summer and winter, respectively, with a maximum amplitude of 45 m s−1 westward in early July and 80 m s−1 eastward at the end of November. The meridional wind below 85 km was generally northward with the amplitudes less than 10 m s−1. In September to November, the meridional wind at 75–80 km becomes as large as 20–30 m s−1. Those zonal wind profiles below 90 km show good coincidence with the CIRA 1986 model, except for the latter half of winter, from January to March, when the observational result showed a much weaker eastward wind than the CIRA model. The height of the reversal of the summer wind from westward to eastward was determined as being 83–84 km, which is close to the CIRA 1986 model of 85 km. The difference between the previous meteor radar results at 35–40°N, which showed the reversal height below 80 km, could be due to interannual variations or the difference in wind measurement technique. In order to clarify that point, careful comparative observations would be necessary. These mean winds were compared with Adelaide MF radar observations, and showed good symmetry between the hemispheres, including the summer reversal height, except for the short period of eastward winds above Kyoto and the long period over Adelaide.  相似文献   

11.
Wind measurements which were carried out during the MAP/WINE Campaign in northern Scandinavia between 2 December 1983 and 24 February 1984 are used to derive background winds and monthly as well as winter mean values from the ground up to 90 km altitude. These mean winds compare favourably to the wind field proposed for the revised CIRA 86, which is deduced from satellite measurements. The vertical structure of the zonal monthly means is similar in both data sets during January and February. The winter mean zonal winds are observed to be slightly stronger in the stratosphere and lower mesosphere during the MAP/WINE winter than the satellite winds proposed for CIRA 86. The long term mean meridional winds are in good agreement up to 60 km. They indicate a dominant influence of quasistationary planetary waves up to 90 km and an ageostrophic poleward flow between 60 km and 85 km over northern Scandinavia, which maximizes at 76 km at about 8 m s−1. The observed short term variability of the wind is discussed with respect to a possible impact of saturating gravity waves on the momentum budget of the middle atmosphere.  相似文献   

12.
The dynamics of the Antarctic and Arctic mesopause regions (ca. 95 ±15 km) are investigated through comparative analyses of winds measured by radars at the Scott Base (78°S), Molodezhnaya (68°S), and Mawson (67°S) stations in the Antarctic, and the near-conjugate stations of Heiss I. (81°N) and Poker Flat (65°N) in the Arctic region. The data were analyzed specifically to delineate hemispheric differences in mean monthly prevailing wind climatologies, and show the circulation systems in the Arctic and Antarctic mesosphere and lower thermospheres to exhibit significant asymmetries. These asymmetries may be attributable to hemispheric differences in dynamical forcing due to one or more of the following: insolation absorption by ozone, other mesospheric heat sources such as exothermic chemical reactions, tropospheric forcing of vertically or obliquely propagating gravity waves which engage in mesospheric mean-flow interactions, and dissipation of planetary waves which find ducting channels through the middle atmosphere.Interannual variability is also examined in the Molodezhnaya and Heiss I. data, which cover the periods 1967–1986 and 1968–1985, respectively. Accompanying significant year-to-year variability, eastward winds at 95 km over the Antarctic (Molodezhnaya station) exhibit a trend of decreasing amplitude from 1968 to 1977 that is not reflected in the Arctic data (Heiss I.); for instance, the annual mean wind decreases in a monotonie sense from 20–25 to 5 m s−1 during this period. It cannot be unambiguously established whether this trend represents a decrease in intensity accompanying secular changes in thermal forcing, or a latitudinal contraction or shifting of the mesospheric jet system. The annual mean winds at Molodezhnaya remain at the 4–8 m s−1 level from 1977 to 1986.In addition, existing empirical models are evaluated against the data, and are shown to be deficient in reproducing some salient characteristics of the high-latitude circulation systems. This latter result especially questions the common practice of deriving winds based on the geostrophic approximation in this altitude/latitude regime.  相似文献   

13.
Results obtained on vertical velocities of air in the mesosphere are presented which were measured by small foil clouds tracked by radar at Andenes (69°) during January and February 1984. The results (typically ± 4–6 m s−1, up to 10 m s−1, and oscillatory in nature) are in good agreement with those obtained by ground-based remote sensing methods. Supplementary observation techniques of the radar return signal show that the interactions between background wind and waves quite often cause small-scale flow separation effects which escape detection when conventional radar tracking is the sole source of information.  相似文献   

14.
Radar wind measurements made at Adelaide (35°S, 138°E) and Kyoto (35°N, 136°E) are used to construct climatologies of solar tidal wind motions in the 80–185 km region. The climatologies, in the form of contour plots of amplitude and phase of the diurnal (24 h) and semidiurnal (12 h) tides, show that there are significant asymmetries between Adelaide and Kyoto. The amplitude of the diurnal tide is significantly larger at Adelaide than at Kyoto. At both stations the phase changes in a systematic way with lime such that the phases of the zonal wind components tend to be in anti-phase at the solstices. At Adelaide, there is more evidence of the propagating (1,1) diurnal mode. At both stations, the semidiurnal tide is strongest and has the longest vertical wavelengths (>100 km) in late summer; short vertical wavelength (~ 50–80 km) oscillations are most in evidence in winter. In order to place the Adelaide and Kyoto observations in context they are compared with observations made at other latitudes and with recent numerical simulations. There is encouraging agreement between the observations and models, especially for the semidiurnal tide.  相似文献   

15.
The coherent pulse Meteor Automatic Radar System (MARS) based at Kharkov (49°30′N, 36°51′E) was used to measure zonal winds in the altitude range 80–105 km in the period from November 1986 to December 1990. It was found that, for the greater part of the year, the zonal prevailing wind component was in the eastward direction. The change from eastward to westward direction begins in the lower thermosphere in February–March, propagating downwards to the mesosphere, and it remains there until June–July. The structure of semidiurnal tides has general regularities at different sites. Annual variations in the monthly mean values of semidiurnal vertical wavelengths are practically the same, both in the northern and southern hemispheres. Wavelengths are more than 100 km in summer months, whereas they are less than 60 km in winter months.Studies of internal gravity wave (IGW) parameters in the height range of 80–105 km have shown that the internal gravity wave amplitude does not exceed 30 m/s, the vertical wavelength is in the range of 10–30 km, the horizontal wavelengths are 100–800 km and the horizontal phase velocities are in the range 20–160 m/s. The propagation and breaking of upward and downward IGW at heights of 80–100 km have been recorded.  相似文献   

16.
We have detected wind oscillations with periods ranging from 1.4 to 20 days at 80–110 km altitude using Kyoto meteor radar observations made in 1983–1985. Among these oscillations, the quasi-2-day wave is repeatedly enhanced in summer and autumn. We found that the period of the quasi-2-day wave ranges from 52 to 55 h in summer, and becomes as short as 46 to 48 h in autumn in 1983 and 1984. The change in the wave period seems to coincide with a decrease in the amplitude of the zonal mean wind. A quasi-2-day wave event was simultaneously observed in January 1984 at Kyoto (35° N, 136°E) and Adelaide (35° S, 138° E), which are located at conjugate points relative to the geographic equator. Amplitudes of the meridional component at Adelaide are approximately four times larger than those observed at Kyoto. Comparison observations clearly show that the meridional component is in phase and the zonal component is out of phase, respectively, implying antisymmetry of the quasi-2-day wave between the northern and southern hemispheres. Relative phase progressions with height are similar between the Kyoto and Adelaide results for both meridional and zonal components, and indicate the presence of an upward energy propagating wave with a vertical wavelength of about 100 km.  相似文献   

17.
The radars utilized are meteor (2), medium-frequency (2) and the new low-frequency (1) systems: analysis techniques have been exhaustively studied internally and comparatively and are not thought to affect the results. Emphasis is placed upon the new height-time contours of 24, 12 h tidal amplitudes and phases which best display height and seasonal structures; where possible high resolution (10 d) is used (Saskatoon) but all stations provide monthly mean resolution. At these latitudes the semi-diurnal tide is generally larger than the diurnal (10–30 m s−1 vs. < 10 ms−1), and displays less month to month variability. The semi-diurnal tide does show significant regular seasonal structure; wavelengths are generally small (⩽50 km) in winter, large in summer (≲ 100 km), and these states are separated by rapid equinoctial transitions. There is some evidence for less regularity toward 40°C. Coupling with mean winds is apparent. The diurnal tide has weaker seasonal variations; however there is a tendency for vertical wavelengths and amplitudes to be larger during summer months. On occasions in winter and fall wavelengths may be less than 50 km. Again the seasonal transitions are in phase with reversals of the zonal wind. Agreement with new numerical models is to be shown encouraging.  相似文献   

18.
Winds and tides were measured by a number of MLT (Mesosphere, Lower Thermosphere) radars with locations varying from 43–70°N, 35–68°S, during the first LTCS (Lower Thermosphere Coupling Study) Campaign, 21–25 September 1987. The mean winds were globally westerly, consistent with early winter-like (NH) and late winter (SH) circulations.The semi-diurnal tide had vertical wavelengths near or less than 100 km at most locations, with some latitudinal variation (longer/shorter at lower latitudes in the NH/SH)—amplitudes decreased at high latitudes. The global tide was closer to anti-symmetric, with northward components being in phase at 90 km. Numerical model calculations [Forbes and Vial (1989), J. atmos. lerr. Phys. 51, 649] for September have rather similar wavelengths and amplitudes; however, the global tide was closer to symmetric, and detailed latitudinal trends differed from observed.The diurnal tide had similar wavelengths in each hemisphere, with short values (~30 km) at 35°, long (evanescence) at 68–70°, and irregular phase structures at mid-latitudes. The tide was neither symmetric nor anti-symmetric. Model calculations for the equinox [Forbes. S and Hagan (1988), Planet. Space Sci. 36, 579] were by nature symmetric, and showed the short wavelengths extending to mid-latitudes (43–52°). Southern hemisphere phases were significantly (6–8 h) different from observations. Amplitudes decreased at high latitudes in model and observation profiles.  相似文献   

19.
The Arecibo Initiative in Dynamics of the Atmosphere (AIDA) '89 was a multi-instrument campaign designed to compare various mesospheric wind measurement techniques. Our emphasis here is the comparison of the incoherent scatter radar (ISR) measurements with those of a 3.175 MHz radar operating a s an imaging Doppler interferometer (1131). We have performed further analyses in order to justify the interpretation of the long term IDI measurements in terms of prevailing winds and tides. Initial comparison of 14 profiles by Hines et al., 1993, J. atmos. terr. Phys. 55, 241–288, showed good agreement between the ISR and IDI measurements up to about 80 km, with fair to poor agreement above that altitude. We have compiled statistics from 208 profiles which show that the prevailing wind and diurnal and semidiurnal tides deduced from the IDI data provide a background wind about which both the IDI and ISR winds are normally distributed over the height range from 70 to 97 km. The 3.175 MHz radar data have also been processed using an interferometry (INT) technique [Van Baelen and Richmond 1991, Radio Sts. 26, 1209–1218] and two spaced antenna (SA) techniques [Meek, 1980, J. atmos. terr. Phys. 42, 837–839; Briggs. 1984, MAP Handbook, Vol. 13, pp. 166–186] to determine the three dimensional wind vector. These are then compared with the IDI results. Tidal amplitudes and phases were calculated using the generalized analysis of Groves, 1959, S. atmos. terr. Phys. 16, 344–356, historically used on meteor wind radar data. Results show a predominance of the diurnal S11 tidal mode in the altitude range 70–110 km, reaching a maximum amplitude 45 ms−1 at 95 km, with semidiurnal amplitudes being about 10–15 ms−1 throughout the height range considered. There is evidence of the two day wave in data from 86–120 km, with amplitudes on the order of 20 ms−1.  相似文献   

20.
In view of the recent observations on the presence of vertical winds in the equatorial ionosphere in the evening and night-time, the role of vertical winds in the Rayleigh-Taylor (R-T) mode instability has been re-examined. The mathematical treatment of Chiu and Straus, earlier developd for a case of horizontal winds, is extended to evaluate the role of vertical winds in causing the R-T mode instability. It is shown that the vertical (downward) winds of small magnitude have a very significant effect on the instability growth rate in the. F-region. A downward wind of l m s−1 can cause the same growth rate as a 200 m s−1 eastward wind at 260 km altitude. Furthermore, a downward wind of 16m s−1 at 300 km can be as effective as that due to the gravitational drift itself. Similarly, an upward wind can inhibit the instability on the bottomside of the F-region. It appears that the polarity of the vertical winds (upward or downward) at the base of the F-layer plays an important role in the growth of the R-T mode plasma instability in the equatorial ionosphere.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号