4.5 Article

Numerical modeling of mesoscale infrasound propagation in the Arctic

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Volume 151, Issue 1, Pages 138-157

Publisher

ACOUSTICAL SOC AMER AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1121/10.0009163

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Funding

  1. U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC-CRREL) basic research program

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This study numerically simulated the impacts of characteristic weather events and seasonal patterns on infrasound propagation in the Arctic region, highlighting the different effects of various phenomena on the propagation and emphasizing the importance of horizontal variations in atmospheric profiles.
The impacts of characteristic weather events and seasonal patterns on infrasound propagation in the Arctic region are simulated numerically. The methodology utilizes wide-angle parabolic equation methods for a windy atmosphere with inputs provided by radiosonde observations and a high-resolution reanalysis of Arctic weather. The calculations involve horizontal distances up to 200 km for which interactions with the troposphere and lower stratosphere dominate. Among the events examined are two sudden stratospheric warmings, which are found to weaken upward refraction by temperature gradients while creating strongly asymmetric refraction from disturbances to the circumpolar winds. Also examined are polar low events, which are found to enhance negative temperature gradients in the troposphere and thus lead to strong upward refraction. Smaller-scale and topographically driven phenomena, such as low-level jets, katabatic winds, and surface-based temperature inversions, are found to create frequent surface-based ducting out to 100 km. The simulations suggest that horizontal variations in the atmospheric profiles, in response to changing topography and surface property transitions, such as ice boundaries, play an important role in the propagation.

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