Abstract

<p>During the SOUTHTRAC-GW (Southern hemisphere Transport, Dynamics and Chemistry – Gravity Waves) field campaign, gravity waves above the Southern Andes mountains, the Drake passage and the Antarctic Peninsula were probed with airborne instruments onboard the HALO research aircraft. The Airborne Lidar for Middle Atmosphere research (ALIMA) detected particularly strong mountain waves in excess of 25 K amplitude in cross-mountain legs above the Southern Andes of research flight ST08 on 12 September 2019. The mountain waves propagated well into the mesosphere up to 65 km altitude with possible generation of smaller-scale secondary waves during wave breaking above 65 km. A superposition of mountain waves with horizontal wavelengths in the range 15-200 km and vertical wavelengths 7-24 km dominated the wave field between 18 and 65 km altitude. Vertical wavelengths predicted by the hydrostatic equation and horizontal wind from the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts’ Integrated Forecasting System are in good agreement with observed vertical wavelengths. We apply wavelet analysis to the measured temperature field along the flight track in order to identify and separate dominant scales, and estimate their relative contributions to the total gravity wave momentum flux as well as the local and zonal-mean gravity wave drag. Furthermore, we compare our observations to results obtained by Fourier ray analysis of the terrain of the Southern Andes. The Fourier model allows the investigation of the 3d-wave field and trapped waves which are not well sampled by the ALIMA instrument because of the relative alignment between the wave fronts and the flight track. These sampling biases are quantified from virtual flights through the model domain at multiple angles and taken into account in the estimation of the total momentum flux derived from ALIMA observations. The combination of high-resolution observations and model data reveals the significance of this and similar mountain wave events in the Southern Andes region for the atmospheric dynamics at ~60° S.</p>

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