Global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology

Three years of gravity wave observations from the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder instrument on NASA's Aura satellite are examined. We produce estimates of the global distribution of gravity wave momentum flux as a function of individual observed wave packets. The observed distribution at...

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Main Authors: Wright, C, Osprey, S, Gille, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2013
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author Wright, C
Osprey, S
Gille, J
author_facet Wright, C
Osprey, S
Gille, J
author_sort Wright, C
collection OXFORD
description Three years of gravity wave observations from the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder instrument on NASA's Aura satellite are examined. We produce estimates of the global distribution of gravity wave momentum flux as a function of individual observed wave packets. The observed distribution at the 25 km altitude level is dominated by the small proportion of wave packets with momentum fluxes greater than ∼0.5 mPa. Depending on latitude and season, these wave packets only comprise ∼7-25% of observations, but are shown to be almost entirely responsible for the morphology of the observed global momentum flux distribution. Large-amplitude wave packets are found to be more important over orographic regions than over flat ocean regions, and to be especially high in regions poleward of 40°S during austral winter. The momentum flux carried by the largest packets relative to the distribution mean is observed to decrease with height over orographic wave generation regions, but to increase with height at tropical latitudes; the mesospheric intermittency resulting is broadly equivalent in both cases. Consistent with previous studies, waves in the top 10% of the extratropical distribution are observed to carry momentum fluxes more than twice the mean and waves in the top 1% more than 10× the mean, and the Gini coefficient is found to characterize the observed distributions well. These results have significant implications for gravity wave modeling. Key Points Observed GW distribution dominated by wave packets with MF>0.5 mPa Intermittency higher over orography Gini coefficient confirmed as a good metric for wave intermittency ©2013. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6e0e8308-516c-4e4d-962a-a43c3181233b2022-03-26T19:21:55ZGlobal observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphologyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6e0e8308-516c-4e4d-962a-a43c3181233bEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordBlackwell Publishing Ltd2013Wright, COsprey, SGille, JThree years of gravity wave observations from the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder instrument on NASA's Aura satellite are examined. We produce estimates of the global distribution of gravity wave momentum flux as a function of individual observed wave packets. The observed distribution at the 25 km altitude level is dominated by the small proportion of wave packets with momentum fluxes greater than ∼0.5 mPa. Depending on latitude and season, these wave packets only comprise ∼7-25% of observations, but are shown to be almost entirely responsible for the morphology of the observed global momentum flux distribution. Large-amplitude wave packets are found to be more important over orographic regions than over flat ocean regions, and to be especially high in regions poleward of 40°S during austral winter. The momentum flux carried by the largest packets relative to the distribution mean is observed to decrease with height over orographic wave generation regions, but to increase with height at tropical latitudes; the mesospheric intermittency resulting is broadly equivalent in both cases. Consistent with previous studies, waves in the top 10% of the extratropical distribution are observed to carry momentum fluxes more than twice the mean and waves in the top 1% more than 10× the mean, and the Gini coefficient is found to characterize the observed distributions well. These results have significant implications for gravity wave modeling. Key Points Observed GW distribution dominated by wave packets with MF>0.5 mPa Intermittency higher over orography Gini coefficient confirmed as a good metric for wave intermittency ©2013. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
spellingShingle Wright, C
Osprey, S
Gille, J
Global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology
title Global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology
title_full Global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology
title_fullStr Global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology
title_full_unstemmed Global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology
title_short Global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology
title_sort global observations of gravity wave intermittency and its impact on the observed momentum flux morphology
work_keys_str_mv AT wrightc globalobservationsofgravitywaveintermittencyanditsimpactontheobservedmomentumfluxmorphology
AT ospreys globalobservationsofgravitywaveintermittencyanditsimpactontheobservedmomentumfluxmorphology
AT gillej globalobservationsofgravitywaveintermittencyanditsimpactontheobservedmomentumfluxmorphology