Author:
Kuilman Maartje Sanne,Karlsson Bodil
Abstract
Abstract. High winter planetary wave activity warms the summer polar mesopause via a
link between the two hemispheres. Complex wave–mean-flow
interactions take place on a global
scale, involving sharpening and weakening of the summer zonal flow. Changes
in the wind shear occasionally generate flow instabilities. Additionally, an
altering zonal wind modifies the breaking of vertically propagating gravity
waves. A crucial component for changes in the summer zonal flow is the
equatorial temperature, as it modifies latitudinal gradients. Since several
mechanisms drive variability in the summer zonal flow, it can be hard to
distinguish which one is dominant. In the mechanism coined interhemispheric
coupling, the mesospheric zonal flow is suggested to be a key player for how
the summer polar mesosphere responds to planetary wave activity in the winter
hemisphere. We here use the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM)
to investigate the role of the summer stratosphere in shaping the conditions
of the summer polar mesosphere. Using composite analyses, we show that in the
absence of an anomalous summer mesospheric temperature gradient between the
equator and the polar region, weak planetary wave forcing in the winter would
lead to a warming of the summer mesosphere region instead of a cooling, and
vice versa. This is opposing the temperature signal of the interhemispheric
coupling that takes place in the mesosphere, in which a cold and calm winter
stratosphere goes together with a cold summer mesopause. We hereby strengthen
the evidence that the variability in the summer mesopause region is mainly
driven by changes in the summer mesosphere rather than in the summer
stratosphere.
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