Abstract

AbstractGravity waves (GW) are a crucial coupling mechanism for the exchange of energy and momentum flux (MF) between the lower, middle, and upper layers of the atmosphere. Among the remote instruments used to study them, there has been a continuous increment in the last years in the installation and use of lidars (light detection and ranging) all over the globe. Two of them, which are only night operating, are located in Río Gallegos (−69.3° W, −51.6° S) and Río Grande (−67.8° W, −53.8° S), in the neighborhood of the austral tip of South America. This is a well‐known GW hot spot from late autumn to early spring. Neither the source for this intense activity nor the extent of its effects have been yet fully elucidated. In the last years, different methods that combine diverse retrieval techniques have been presented in order to describe the three‐dimensional (3‐D) structure of observed GW, their propagation direction, their energy, and the MF that they carry. Assuming the presence of a dominant GW in the covered region, we develop here a technique that uses the temperature profiles from two simultaneously working close lidars to infer the vertical wavelength, ground‐based frequency, and horizontal wavelength along the direction joining both instruments. If in addition within the time and spatial frame of both lidars there is also a retrieval from a satellite like SABER (Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry), then we show that it is possible to infer also the second horizontal wavelength and therefore reproduce the full 3‐D GW structure. Our method becomes verified with an example that includes tests that corroborate that both lidars and the satellite are sampling the same GW. The improvement of the Río Gallegos lidar performance could lead in the future to the observation of a wealth of cases during the GW high season. Between 8 and 14 hr (depending on the month) of continuous nighttime data could be obtained in the stratosphere and mesosphere in simultaneous soundings from both ground‐based lidars.

Highlights

  • Gravity waves (GWs) have significant global effects from the lower to the upper atmosphere (e.g., Fritts & Alexander, 2003; Gill, 1982)

  • We have shown in a zone with high GW activity through one illustrative example that it is possible to reconstruct the 3-D structure of a dominant wave observed by two close simultaneous lidar soundings and an additional vertical temperature profile

  • This is an essential quantity to determine directional momentum flux (MF), which is strongly related to atmospheric model parameterizations of GW drag

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Summary

Introduction

Gravity waves (GWs) have significant global effects from the lower to the upper atmosphere (e.g., Fritts & Alexander, 2003; Gill, 1982). In the present study we employ a succession of two close and simultaneous lidar temperature measurements over time and height and a third instantaneous retrieval from a satellite within the same spatial and time frame in order to infer the ground-based frequency and the three cartesian wavelengths of a dominant GW in the studied zone. This allows the determination of the three phase velocity components and the net GW MF.

Data and Method
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