Interferometer (HRDI) zonal mean zonal wind data. We quantify and interpret differences between previous diurnal and semidiurnal predictions, hereafter G SWM-95, and GSWM-98 results. The revised GW stress parameterization accounts for the most profound changes and leads to seasonal variability predictions that are consistent with diurnal amplitudes observed in the upper mesosphere and lower thermosphere. Unresolved differences between HRDI and other wind climatologies significantly affect MLT tidal predictions.
A quasi‐16‐day wave in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere is investigated through analyses of radar data during January/February 1979 and through numerical simulations for various background wind conditions. Previous workers have examined about 19 days of tropospheric and stratospheric data during January 10–28, 1979, and present conflicting evidence as to whether a large westward propagating wavenumber 1 oscillation observed during this period can be identified in terms of the second symmetric Rossby normal mode of zonal wavenumber 1, commonly referred to as the “16‐day wave.” In the present work we have applied spectral analysis techniques to meridional and zonal winds near 95 km altitude obtained from radar measurements over Obninsk, Russia (54°N, 38°E) and Saskatoon, Canada (52°N, 107°W). These data reveal oscillations of the order of ±10 m s−1 with a period near 16 days as well as waves with periods near 5 and 10 days. These periodicities all correspond to expected resonant frequencies of atmospheric disturbances associated with westward propagating free Rossby modes of zonal wavenumber 1. Numerical simulations are performed which demonstrate that the 95‐km measurements of the 16‐day wave are consistent with upward extension of the oscillation determined from the tropospheric and stratospheric data. Noteworthy features of the model in terms of its applicability in the mesosphere/lower thermosphere regime are explicit inclusion of eddy and molecular diffusion of heat and momentum and realistic distributions of mean winds, especially between 80 and 100 km. The latter include a westerly wind regime above the summer easterly mesospheric jet, thus providing a ducting channel enabling interhemispheric penetration of the winter planetary wave disturbance. This serves to explain the appearance of a quasi‐16‐day wave recently reported in the high‐latitude summer mesopause (Williams and Avery, 1992). However, the efficiency of this interhemispheric coupling may be reduced by gravity wave stress. No significant penetration of the 16‐day oscillation above about 100 km is predicted by the model. Reported signatures of a 16‐day periodicity in ionospheric data therefore require modulation of tidal or gravity wave accessibility to the thermosphere, or perhaps in situ excitation.
A set of numerical experiments have been conducted using the National Center for Atmospheric Research Thermosphere-Ionosphere-Mesosphere-Electrodynamics General Circulation Model (NCAR TIME-GCM) to understand the effects of the quasi-two-day wave (QTDW) on the middle atmosphere horizontal wind and temperature fields. A zonal wavenumber three perturbation with a period of 48 hours and a latitudinal structure identical to the (3, 0) Rossby-gravity mode has been included at the lower-boundary of the model. A response in the middle atmosphere horizontal wind fields is observed with a structure qualitatively similar to observations and other model results. There is also some evidence to suggest an increase in the lower-thermosphere QTDW response due to the interaction with gravity waves. Changes are observed in the zonal mean wind and temperature fields that are clearly related to the QTDW, however it is unclear if these changes are the direct result of wave driving due to the QTDW or are from another source. Evidence for nonlinear interactions between the QTDW and the migrating tides is presented. This includes significant (40-50%) decreases in the amplitude of the migrating tides when the QTDW is present and the generation of wave components which can be tracked back to an interaction between the QTDW and the migrating tides. Clear evidence for the existence of a westward propagating zonal wavenumber six nonmigrating diurnal tidal component which results from the nonlinear interaction between the QTDW and the migrating tides is also presented.
Abstract. The capabilities of the global-scale wave model (GSWM) [Hagan et al., 1995] are extended to include migrating thermospheric solar tides. The GSWM thermospheric tidal forcing parameterization is based on neutral gas heating calculated from first principles in the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) thermosphere/ionosphere electrodynamics general circulation model (TIE-GCM). This is the first time that a physics-based thermospheric forcing scheme has been used in a model like G SWM. Previous two-dimensional steady state linear tidal models used exospheric temperature measurements to calibrate upper atmospheric tidal forcing. New GSWM results illustrate thermospheric tidal responses that are largely consistent with tides in the TIE-GCM. Diurnal temperature amplitudes increase with increasing solar activity, but there is no analogous diurnal wind response. The thermospheric semidiurnal tide is much weaker than the diurnal tide.Semidiurnal temperature perturbations peak in the lower thermosphere where the semidiurnal forcing maximizes. The new in situ results must be combined with the GSWM upward propagating tide in the lower thermosphere, because the upward propagating components dominate the semidiurnal response throughout the region and the diurnal response below •0130 kin. In situ forcing accounts for most of the diurnal response aloft. Our preliminary evaluation of the GSWM thermospheric predictions is inconclusive. More extensive evaluations are necessary to make a firm assessment of whether the model captures the salient features of the seasonal and solar cycle variability of thermospheric tides.
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