How do gravity waves triggered by a typhoon propagate from the troposphere to the upper atmosphere?
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Published:2022-09-19
Issue:18
Volume:22
Page:12077-12091
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Li Qinzeng, Xu Jiyao, Liu Hanli, Liu XiaoORCID, Yuan Wei
Abstract
Abstract. Gravity waves (GWs) strongly affect atmospheric dynamics and photochemistry
and the coupling between the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, and
thermosphere. In addition, GWs generated by strong disturbances in the
troposphere (e.g. thunderstorms and typhoons) can affect the atmosphere of
Earth from the troposphere to the thermosphere. However, the fundamental
process of GW propagation from the troposphere to the thermosphere is poorly
understood because it is challenging to constrain this process using
observations. Moreover, GWs tend to dissipate rapidly in the thermosphere
because the molecular diffusion increases exponentially with height. In this
study, a double-layer airglow network was used to capture concentric GWs
(CGWs) over China that were excited by Typhoon Chaba (2016). We
used ERA5 reanalysis data and Multi-functional Transport Satellite-1R
observations to quantitatively describe the propagation processes of
typhoon-generated CGWs from the troposphere, through the stratosphere and
mesosphere, to the thermosphere. We found that the CGWs in the mesopause
region were generated directly by the typhoon in the troposphere. However,
the backward-ray-tracing analysis suggested that CGWs in the thermosphere
originated from the secondary waves generated by the dissipation of the CGW
and/or nonlinear processes in the mesopause region.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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