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Global static stability and its relation to gravity waves in the middle atmosphere
Author(s) -
Liu Xiao,
Xu JiYao,
Yue Jia
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
earth and planetary physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2096-3955
DOI - 10.26464/epp2020047
Subject(s) - tropopause , mesopause , gravity wave , middle latitudes , atmosphere (unit) , mesosphere , atmospheric sciences , stratosphere , latitude , thermosphere , geology , physics , gravitational wave , astrophysics , geophysics , meteorology , geodesy , ionosphere
The global atmospheric static stability ( N 2 ) in the middle atmosphere and its relation to gravity waves (GWs) were investigated by using the temperature profiles measured by the Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry (SABER) instrument from 2002 to 2018. At low latitudes, a layer with enhanced N 2 occurs at an altitude of ~20 km and exhibits annual oscillations caused by tropopause inversion layers. Above an altitude of ~70 km, enhanced N 2 exhibits semiannual oscillations at low latitudes caused by the mesosphere inversion layers and annual oscillations at high latitudes resulting from the downward shift of the summer mesopause. The correlation coefficients between N 2 and GW amplitudes can be larger than 0.8 at latitudes poleward of ~40°N/S. This observation provides factual evidence that a large N 2 supports large‐amplitude GWs and indicates that N 2 plays a dominant role in maintaining GWs at least at high latitudes of the middle atmosphere. This evidence also partially explains the previous results regarding the phase changes of annual oscillations of GWs at high latitudes.

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