A “Boreing” Night of Observations of the Upper Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere Over the Andes Lidar Observatory
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Published:2023-10-19
Issue:20
Volume:128
Page:
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ISSN:2169-897X
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Container-title:Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
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language:en
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Short-container-title:JGR Atmospheres
Author:
Hecht J. H.1ORCID,
Liu A. Z.2ORCID,
Fritts D. C.3ORCID,
Walterscheid R. L.2ORCID,
Gelinas L. J.1ORCID,
Rudy R. J.14
Affiliation:
1. Space Science Applications Laboratory The Aerospace Corporation El Segundo CA USA
2. Embry‐Riddle Aeronautical University Daytona Beach FL USA
3. GATS Boulder CO USA
4. Kookoosint Scientific Camarillo CA USA
Abstract
AbstractA very high‐spatial resolution (∼21–23 m pixel at 85 km altitude) OH airglow imager at the Andes Lidar Observatory at Cerro Pachón, Chile observed considerable ducted wave activity on the night of 29–30 October 2016. This instrument was collocated with a Na wind‐temperature lidar that provided data revealing the occurrence of strong ducts. A large field of view OH and greenline airglow imager showed waves present over a vertical extent consistent with the altitudes of the ducting features identified in the lidar profiles. While waves that appeared to be ducted were seen in all imagers throughout the observation interval, the wave train seen in the OH images at earlier times had a distinct leading nonsinusoidal phase followed by several, lower‐amplitude, more sinusoidal phases, suggesting a likely bore. The leading phase exhibited significant dissipation via small‐scale secondary instabilities suggesting vortex rings that progressed rapidly to smaller scales and turbulence (the latter not fully resolved) thereafter. The motions of these small‐scale features were consistent with their location in the duct at or below ∼83–84 km. Bore dissipation caused a momentum flux divergence and a local acceleration of the mean flow within the duct along the direction of the initial bore propagation. A number of these features are consistent with mesospheric bores observed or modeled in previous studies.
Funder
Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences
Air Force Office of Scientific Research
Heliophysics Division
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics
Cited by
1 articles.
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