4.6 Article

The lower thermosphere during the northern hemisphere winter of 2009: A modeling study using high-altitude data assimilation products in WACCM-X

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 118, Issue 16, Pages 8954-8968

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/jgrd.50632

Keywords

stratospheric warming; lower thermosphere

Funding

  1. NASA/LWS [NNH12AT21I]
  2. NASA [X09AJ83G]
  3. Office of Naval Research under the ISES (Integrating Sun and Earth Systems) project [6.1]
  4. U.S. National Science Foundation
  5. Directorate For Geosciences
  6. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [1138784] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We present numerical simulations using the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model, extended version, constrained below 90km by a combination of NASA's Modern Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications and the U.S. Navy's Operational Global Atmospheric Prediction System - Advanced Level Physics High Altitude assimilation products. The period examined is January and February 2009, when a large stratospheric warming occurred on 24 January 2009, with anomalous circulation persisting for several weeks after the event. In this study, we focus on the dynamical response of the lower thermosphere up to 200km. We find evidence of migrating and nonmigrating tides, Rossby and Rossby-gravity modes, and Kelvin waves, whose amplitudes appear to be modulated at the times leading and following the stratospheric warming. While the Rossby, Rossby-gravity, and Kelvin modes are rapidly dissipated in the lower thermosphere (above 110km), the tides maintain substantial amplitude throughout the thermosphere, but their vertical structure becomes external above about 120-150km. Most waves identified in the simulations decrease in amplitude in the thermosphere, indicating remote forcing from below and strong dissipation by molecular diffusion at high altitudes; however, the amplitude of the migrating DW1 tide increases in the thermosphere suggesting in situ forcing. We show that the amplitude of the tides (such as the DW1) changes as the background wind alters the vorticity in the tropics, which broadens or narrows the tropical waveguide. Our results also suggest that fast Rossby normal modes (periods10days) are excited by instability of the zonal-mean wind distribution following the stratospheric warming.

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