Abstract

[1] Using long-term data (January 1998 to December 2009) collected from Mesosphere-Stratosphere-Troposphere (MST) radar located at a tropical station, Gadanki (13.5°N, 79.2°E), India, variability of low-latitude mesospheric vertical wind is investigated for the first time. The emphasis is on sub-daily, monthly, seasonal and annual variabilities in vertical wind in the altitude region 65–85 km. Possible sources of errors in the vertical wind measurement at mesospheric altitudes from the MST radar are discussed. The observed mesospheric vertical wind is generally upward in all the seasons. During winter and summer, significant sub-daily variations are noticed followed by spring and fall equinoxes. The vertical wind can reach occasionally values as high as 5 ms−1 but most of the time (95%) it is, in general, less than ∼2.63 ms−1. The present observations are consistent with the general circulation features in recent models for low latitude locations with northward and upward wind prevailing throughout the year representing part of meridional circulation.

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