2008
DOI: 10.5194/acp-8-7557-2008
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Large-scale planetary disturbances in stratospheric temperature at high-latitudes in the southern summer hemisphere

Abstract: Abstract.The global structure and propagation of largescale (periods >5 days) waves in the Southern Hemisphere summer (December 2006-February 2007 at 60 • S-75 • S latitude are examined using temperature data from GPS radio occultation measurements by COSMIC/FORMOSAT 3 satellite constellation at 20 km and 30 km altitude. Spectral analysis has revealed eastward propagating planetary scale perturbations with wavenumbers 1 and 2 and periods of 10, 16 and 23 days, and stationary waves with wavenumbers 1 and 2. The… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…While, as usual, no SSWs occurred in the Southern Hemisphere during these years, significant interannual variability in wave activity is noted. In particular, a large amount of eastward wave activity is present during spring 2006, lasting until December, as previously reported by Shepherd and Tsuda (2008). This amount of travelling wave activity was not observed so late in the following two seasons, although the E1 waves were stronger earlier during the 2007 and 2008 springs.…”
Section: Southern Hemisphere Planetary Wave Activitysupporting
confidence: 83%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…While, as usual, no SSWs occurred in the Southern Hemisphere during these years, significant interannual variability in wave activity is noted. In particular, a large amount of eastward wave activity is present during spring 2006, lasting until December, as previously reported by Shepherd and Tsuda (2008). This amount of travelling wave activity was not observed so late in the following two seasons, although the E1 waves were stronger earlier during the 2007 and 2008 springs.…”
Section: Southern Hemisphere Planetary Wave Activitysupporting
confidence: 83%
“…The launch of the Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere and Climate Global Positioning System Radio Occultation (COS-MIC GPS-RO) satellites in April 2006 has resulted in about 2000 profiles per day (Anthes et al, 2008) fully distributed about the globe in longitude and local time, making them ideal for global scale wave studies (Alexander et al, 2008b). COSMIC data were used to show large planetary wave activity in the 2006 Antarctic early summer, more consistent with winter-time activity (Shepherd and Tsuda, 2008). COSMIC data are also dense enough to quantify changes in gravity wave activity over short time scales (on the order of several days) and were used to study gravity wave activity associated with recent Arctic SSWs Wang and Alexander, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[5] Observational studies of these waves can be separated into research which examines the characteristics of these motions using ground-based [Espy et al, 1997;Mitchell et al, 1999;Espy et al, 2005;Murphy et al, 2006;Hibbins et al, 2009] and satellite-based instruments [Wu et al, 1995;Limpasuvan et al, 2005;Shepherd and Tsuda, 2008;Limpasuvan and Wu, 2009]. A number of studies have also examined these waves in meteorological analyses and reanalyses data sets [Fedulina et al, 2004;Madden, 2007].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A previous study from a southern hemispheric midlatitude station, Grahamstown (33.3 • S, 26.5 • W), Malinga and Poole (2002) reported strong QSDW activity in winter stratosphere due to a strong westerly jet. Using satellitebased observations, Shepherd and Tsuda (2008) reported a strong eastward 16-day wave coupling with the quasistationary waves of zonal wave number 1 and 2 at Antarctic latitudes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%