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  3. Secondary Gravity Waves Generated by Breaking Mountain Waves Over Europe
 

Secondary Gravity Waves Generated by Breaking Mountain Waves Over Europe

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/87104
Publisher DOI
10.1029/2019jd031662
Description
A strong mountain wave, observed over Central Europe on 12 January 2016, is simulated in 2D under two fixed background wind conditions representing opposite tidal phases. The aim of the simulation is to investigate the breaking of the mountain wave and subsequent generation of nonprimary waves in the upper atmosphere. The model results show that the mountain wave first breaks as it approaches a mesospheric critical level creating turbulence on horizontal scales of 8–30 km. These turbulence scales couple directly to horizontal secondary waves scales, but those scales are prevented from reaching the thermosphere by the tidal winds, which act like a filter. Initial secondary waves that can reach the thermosphere range from 60 to 120 km in horizontal scale and are influenced by the scales of the horizontal and vertical forcing associated with wave breaking at mountain wave zonal phase width, and horizontal wavelength scales. Large-scale nonprimary waves dominate over the whole duration of the simulation with horizontal scales of 107–300 km and periods of 11–22 minutes. The thermosphere winds heavily influence the time-averaged spatial distribution of wave forcing in the thermosphere, which peaks at 150 km altitude and occurs both westward and eastward of the source in the 2 UT background simulation and primarily eastward of the source in the 7 UT background simulation. The forcing amplitude is urn:x-wiley:jgrd:media:jgrd56081:jgrd56081-math-00012 urn:x-wiley:jgrd:media:jgrd56081:jgrd56081-math-0002 that of the primary mountain wave breaking and dissipation. This suggests that nonprimary waves play a significant role in gravity waves dynamics and improved understanding of the thermospheric winds is crucial to understanding their forcing distribution.
Date of Publication
2020-03-05
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Heale, C. J.
Bossert, K.
Vadas, S. L.
Hoffmann, L.
Dörnbrack, A.
Stober, G.
Institute of Applied Physics, Microwaves
Institute of Applied Physics (IAP)
Snively, J. B.
Jacobi, C.
Additional Credits
Institute of Applied Physics (IAP)
Institute of Applied Physics, Microwaves
Series
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
ISSN
2169-897X
2169-8996
Access(Rights)
open.access
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