Abstract

Abstract. Gravity waves in the terrestrial atmosphere are a vital geophysical process, acting to transport energy and momentum on a wide range of scales and to couple the various atmospheric layers. Despite the importance of these waves, the many studies to date have often exhibited very dissimilar results, and it remains unclear whether these differences are primarily instrumental or methodological. Here, we address this problem by comparing observations made by a diverse range of the most widely used gravity-wave-resolving instruments in a common geographic region around the southern Andes and Drake Passage, an area known to exhibit strong wave activity. Specifically, we use data from three limb-sounding radiometers (Microwave Limb Sounder, MLS-Aura; HIgh Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder, HIRDLS; Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry, SABER), the Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere and Climate (COSMIC) GPS-RO constellation, a ground-based meteor radar, the Advanced Infrared Sounder (AIRS) infrared nadir sounder and radiosondes to examine the gravity wave potential energy (GWPE) and vertical wavelengths (λz) of individual gravity-wave packets from the lower troposphere to the edge of the lower thermosphere ( ∼ 100 km). Our results show important similarities and differences. Limb sounder measurements show high intercorrelation, typically > 0.80 between any instrument pair. Meteor radar observations agree in form with the limb sounders, despite vast technical differences. AIRS and radiosonde observations tend to be uncorrelated or anticorrelated with the other data sets, suggesting very different behaviour of the wave field in the different spectral regimes accessed by each instrument. Evidence of wave dissipation is seen, and varies strongly with season. Observed GWPE for individual wave packets exhibits a log-normal distribution, with short-timescale intermittency dominating over a well-repeated monthly-median seasonal cycle. GWPE and λz exhibit strong correlations with the stratospheric winds, but not with local surface winds. Our results provide guidance for interpretation and intercomparison of such data sets in their full context.

Highlights

  • The last 2 decades have been a golden age for the measurement of gravity waves in the terrestrial atmosphere

  • We investigate the observed distribution of gravity wave potential energy per unit mass (GWPE) and gravity wave vertical wavelengths over a 10◦ latitude by 20◦ longitude box centred on Tierra del Fuego (54◦ S 68◦ W) for the satellite and radiosonde data sets, and the gravity-wave-induced wind variance for the Southern Argentina Agile Meteor Radar (SAAMER) radar

  • Except for SAAMER and possibly Advanced Infrared Sounder (AIRS), distributions typically scale with their monthly median, with the positive skew leading to much larger variability in mean GWPE than the medians we examine here

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Summary

Introduction

The last 2 decades have been a golden age for the measurement of gravity waves in the terrestrial atmosphere. Wright et al.: Multi-instrument gravity waves I: GWPE and λz tions, advanced methods for extracting new information from more traditional atmospheric measurement techniques have been developed, from in situ radiosondes (Vincent and Allen, 1996; Guest et al, 2000) in the troposphere to wind measurements inferred from meteor trails in the upper mesosphere (Hocking, 2005; Davies et al, 2015). This avalanche of information has allowed novel studies which have investigated wave processes from pole-to-pole and from the surface to the thermosphere

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