Abstract

Abstract. The mesospheric OH Meinel emissions are subject of many theoretical and observational studies devoted to this part of the atmosphere. Depending on the initial vibrational level of excitation the altitude of the considered OH Meinel emission is systematically shifted, which has important implications for the intercomparison of different studies considering different transition bands. Previous model studies suggest that these vertical shifts are essentially caused by the process of collisional quenching with atomic oxygen. Following this hypothesis, a recent study found experimental evidence of a coherent seasonality at tropical latitudes between vertical shifts of different OH Meinel bands and changes in atomic oxygen concentrations. Despite the consistent finding of the above mentioned hypothesis, it cannot be excluded that the actual temporal variability of the vertical shifts between different OH Meinel bands may in addition be controlled or even dominated by other processes. It remains an open question whether the observed temporal evolution is indeed mainly controlled by the modulation of the collisional quenching process with atomic oxygen. By means of a sensitivity study which employs a quenching model to simulations made with the SD-WACCM4 chemistry climate model, we aim at assessing this question. From this study we find that the observed seasonality of vertical OH Meinel shifts is only partially controlled by temporal changes in atomic oxygen concentrations, while molecular oxygen has another noticeable impact on the vertical OH Meinel shifts. This in particular becomes evident for the diurnal variability of vertical OH Meinel shifts, which reveal only a poor correlation with the atomic oxygen species. Furthermore, changes in the H + O3 source gases provide another mechanism that can potentially affect the diurnal variability in addition. By comparison with limb radiance observations from the SABER/TIMED satellite this provides an explanation for the less evident diurnal response between changes in O concentrations and vertical OH Meinel shifts. On the other hand, at seasonal timescales the coherency between both quantities is again evident in SABER/TIMED but less pronounced compared to our model simulations.

Highlights

  • The hydroxyl (OH) emission layer is a prominent feature of the mesopause region

  • The advantage of our model approach is that we can deactivate the individual collisional quenching processes to study the associated impact on the relative vertical OH(ν) shifts. We compare these simulations with limb radiance observations from the SABER (Sounding of the Atmosphere by Broadband Emission Radiometry) instrument onboard the TIMED (Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics Dynamics) satellite and discuss the observed temporal variability of the vertical OH(ν) shifts with regard to our model results

  • While the inclusion of number densities according to D.1 and D.2 helps us to improve the vertical sensitivity of our model study, systematic departures between simulated and real number densities are a source of error for our investigation of the collisional quenching effects

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Summary

Introduction

The hydroxyl (OH) emission layer is a prominent feature of the mesopause region. Its main production process is commonly referred to as the Bates–Nicolet mechanism (McDade, 1991). The advantage of our model approach is that we can deactivate the individual collisional quenching processes to study the associated impact on the relative vertical OH(ν) shifts We compare these simulations with limb radiance observations from the SABER (Sounding of the Atmosphere by Broadband Emission Radiometry) instrument onboard the TIMED (Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics Dynamics) satellite and discuss the observed temporal variability of the vertical OH(ν) shifts with regard to our model results. 6 we investigate the initial hypothesis on the role of collisional quenching on the vertical OH(ν) shifts by simulating the seasonal variability of the OH emission layer from the SD-WACCM4 data for different model assumptions These simulations are compared with experimental observations from SABER. We provide a summary of our results for the seasonal and diurnal variability of the relative vertical OH(ν) shifts in Sect. 8 and discuss their implications on the initial hypothesis

Hydroxyl quenching model
SD-WACCM4
Methodology
Sources of error
Simulated tidal signatures in OH and O: a monthly case example
Sensitivity study
May Jul Sep Nov Jan Mar May
Comparison with SABER
Full Text
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