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  1. Abstract

    The climatology of earth's Na density over Fort Collins, CO (41°N, 105°W) based on nocturnal Na lidar observations between 1990 and 1999 was reported by She et al. (2000,https://doi.org/10.1029/2000gl003825). Based on a continued 28‐year data set between 1990 and 2017 with the latter part observed over Logan, UT (42N, 112W), we update the seasonal variations between 80 and 110 km. This data set is also used to deduce long‐term responses of Na density (profile) between 75 and 110 km, showing a positive linear trend between 75 and 93 km (with maximum ∼2.87 × 108 m−3/decade at 87 km); it turns negative before approaching zero at 110 km (with minimum ∼−2.96 × 107 m−3/decade at 100 km). The associated solar response is also positive for the altitude range in question (with maximum ∼5.20 × 106 m−3/SFU at 91 km). We also derived the 28‐year mean Na layer column abundance, centroid altitude, and root mean square width to be 3.92 ± 2.14 1013 m−2, 91.3 ± 1.0 km, and 4.62 ± 0.56 km, respectively, and deduced long‐term trend and solar cycle responses of column abundance and centroid altitude, respectively to be 7.81 ± 1.63%/decade and 16.9 ± 2.8%/100SFU, and −355 ± 35 m/decade and −1.94 ± 0.69 m/SFU. We explained conceptually how positive long‐term responses in Na density led to positive responses in column abundance and negative responses in centroid altitude.

     
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  2. The mesospheric polar vortex (MPV) plays a critical role in coupling the atmosphere-ionosphere system, so its accurate simulation is imperative for robust predictions of the thermosphere and ionosphere. While the stratospheric polar vortex is widely understood and characterized, the mesospheric polar vortex is much less well-known and observed, a short-coming that must be addressed to improve predictability of the ionosphere. The winter MPV facilitates top-down coupling via the communication of high energy particle precipitation effects from the thermosphere down to the stratosphere, though the details of this mechanism are poorly understood. Coupling from the bottom-up involves gravity waves (GWs), planetary waves (PWs), and tidal interactions that are distinctly different and important during weak vs. strong vortex states, and yet remain poorly understood as well. Moreover, generation and modulation of GWs by the large wind shears at the vortex edge contribute to the generation of traveling atmospheric disturbances and traveling ionospheric disturbances. Unfortunately, representation of the MPV is generally not accurate in state-of-the-art general circulation models, even when compared to the limited observational data available. Models substantially underestimate eastward momentum at the top of the MPV, which limits the ability to predict upward effects in the thermosphere. The zonal wind bias responsible for this missing momentum in models has been attributed to deficiencies in the treatment of GWs and to an inaccurate representation of the high-latitude dynamics. In the coming decade, simulations of the MPV must be improved. 
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  3. null (Ed.)
    Abstract The Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model, version 4 (WACCM4), is used to investigate the influence of stratospheric conditions on the development of sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs). To this end, targeted experiments are performed on selected modeled SSW events. Specifically, the model is reinitialized three weeks before a given SSW, relaxing the surface fluxes, winds, and temperature below 10 km to the corresponding fields from the free-running simulation. Hence, the tropospheric wave evolution is unaltered across the targeted experiments, but the stratosphere itself can evolve freely. The stratospheric zonal-mean state is then altered 21 days prior to the selected SSWs and rerun with an ensemble of different initial conditions. It is found that a given tropospheric evolution concomitant with the development of an SSW does not uniquely determine the occurrence of an event and that the stratospheric conditions are relevant to the subsequent evolution of the stratospheric flow toward an SSW, even for a fixed tropospheric evolution. It is also shown that interpreting the meridional heat flux at 100 hPa as a proxy of the tropospheric injection of wave activity into the stratosphere should be regarded with caution and that stratospheric dynamics critically influence the heat flux at that altitude. 
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  4. Abstract

    The effect of the Madden‐Julian Oscillation (MJO) on springtime Antarctic ozone variations is revealed for the first time from multi‐satellite reanalysis and model simulations. Twenty to 30 days after MJO Phase 8 (P8), Antarctic total column ozone (TCO) anomalies significantly decrease by up to −15 DU, associated with a wave‐1 response at around 60°S. After MJO P8, MJO‐related geopotential height anomalies in the southern hemispheric (SH) Indian Ocean emanate from subtropics to polar regions, leading to suppressed upward and poleward propagation of planetary waves (PWs) and weakened Brewer‐Dobson circulation in the SH stratosphere. This in turn results in less ozone transport from midlatitudes into the polar region and thus a negative polar TCO response. Dynamical transport plays a dominant role in modulating the Antarctic TCO after MJO P8. The magnitude of transient changes due to chemical processes is relatively weak than that caused by dynamical transport.

     
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