skip to main content


Search for: All records

Creators/Authors contains: "Moffat���Griffin, T."

Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

  1. Abstract

    An unusual sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) event occurred in the Southern Hemisphere in September 2019. Ground‐based and satellite observations show the presence of transient eastward‐ and westward‐propagating quasi‐10 day planetary waves (Q10DWs) during the SSW. The planetary wave activity maximizes in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere region approximately 10 days after the SSW onset. Analysis indicates that the westward‐propagating Q10DW with zonal wave numbers = 1 is mainly symmetric about the equator, which is contrary to theory which predicts the presence of an antisymmetric normal mode for such planetary wave. Observations from microwave limb sounder and sounding of the atmosphere using broadband emission radiometry are combined with meteor radar wind measurements from Antarctica, providing a comprehensive view of Q10DW wave activity in the Southern Hemisphere during this SSW. Analysis suggests that the Q10DWs of various wavenumbers are potentially excited from nonlinear wave‐wave interactions that also involve stationary planetary waves withs = 1 ands = 2. The Q10DWs are also found to couple the ionosphere with the neutral atmosphere. The timing of the quasi‐10‐day oscillations (Q10DOs) in the ionosphere are contemporaneous with the Q10DWs in the neutral atmosphere during a period of relatively low solar and geomagnetic activity, suggesting that the Q10DWs play a key role in driving the ionospheric Q10DOs during the Southern SSW event. This study provides observational evidence for coupling between the neutral atmosphere and ionosphere through the upward propagation of global scale planetary waves.

     
    more » « less
  2. Abstract

    The Utah State University Advanced Mesospheric Temperature Mapper was deployed at the Amundsen‐Scott South Pole Station in 2010 to measure OH temperature at ~87 km as part of an international network to study the mesospheric dynamics over Antarctica. During the austral winter of 2014, an unusually large amplitude ~28‐day oscillation in mesospheric temperature was observed for ~100 days from the South Pole Station. This study investigates the characteristics and global structure of this exceptional planetary‐scale wave event utilizing ground‐based mesospheric OH temperature measurements from two Antarctic stations (South Pole and Rothera) together with satellite temperature measurements from the Microwave Limb Sounder on the Aura satellite and the Solar Occultation For Ice Experiment on the Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere satellite. Our analyses have revealed that this large oscillation is a wintertime, high‐latitude phenomenon, exhibiting a coherent zonal wave #1 structure below 80‐km altitude. At higher altitudes, the wave was confined in longitude between 180°E and 360°E. The amplitude of this oscillation reached ~15 K at 85 km, and it was observed to grow with altitude as it extended from the stratosphere into the lower thermosphere in the Southern Hemisphere. The satellite data further established the existence of this oscillation in the Northern Hemisphere during the boreal wintertime. The main characteristics and global structure of this event as observed in temperature are consistent with the predicted 28‐day Rossby Wave (1,4) mode.

     
    more » « less