Paper
16 February 2004 Seasonal variations of gravity wave variance inferred from CLAES
Peter Preusse, Manfred Ern, Klaus Ulrich Grossmann, John L. Mergenthaler
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Abstract
Gravity wave variances in CLAES temperature data are isolated by a 0-6 zonal wavenumber Kalman filter. Resulting vertical profiles of temperature residuals are analyzed by a combination of Maximum Entropy Method (MEM) and harmonic analysis for gravity waves (GWs). This is the same method previously employed to study GWs in CRISTA data. We obtain nearly 1.5 years of continuous GW data between 34S and 34N and good coverage at higher latitudes depending on UARS yaw maneuvers. Results are compared to CRISTA data and interpreted for different wave sources. A time series of zonal mean GW variance shows the seasonal shift of the tropical maximum of GW variance around the equator. Maximum variances are reached 1-2 months after summer solstice, consistent with the shift of the inner tropical convergence zone. Quiet summer and enhanced winter values at mid and high latitudes are due to a combination of wind filtering and wind modulation. Wind filtering occurs when GWs propagate from tropospheric west winds into the lower stratosphere. There prevailing winds reverse from west wind in winter to east wind in summer, thus causing a critical layer for low phase speed GWs during summer. The term wind modulation is used for the Doppler shift of the GW spectrum by the wind at the observation altitude shifting parts of the GW spectrum in and out the vertical-wavelength visibility limits of the instrument. We find evidence for both processes in the data and indication that GW filtering might be the more important one.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Peter Preusse, Manfred Ern, Klaus Ulrich Grossmann, and John L. Mergenthaler "Seasonal variations of gravity wave variance inferred from CLAES", Proc. SPIE 5235, Remote Sensing of Clouds and the Atmosphere VIII, (16 February 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.514171
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Cryogenic limb array etalon spectrometers

Modulation

Stratosphere

Atmospheric propagation

Wave propagation

Doppler effect

Error analysis

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