The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion

How convection couples to mesoscale vertical motion and what determines these motions is poorly understood. This study diagnoses profiles of area-averaged mesoscale divergence from measurements of horizontal winds collected by an extensive upper-air sounding network of a recent campaign over the wes...

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Main Authors: Stephan, Claudia Christine, Mariaccia, Alexis
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-2020-61
https://wcd.copernicus.org/preprints/wcd-2020-61/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:wcdd91701 2023-05-15T17:33:37+02:00 The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion Stephan, Claudia Christine Mariaccia, Alexis 2020-12-22 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-2020-61 https://wcd.copernicus.org/preprints/wcd-2020-61/ eng eng doi:10.5194/wcd-2020-61 https://wcd.copernicus.org/preprints/wcd-2020-61/ eISSN: 2698-4016 Text 2020 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-2020-61 2020-12-28T17:22:12Z How convection couples to mesoscale vertical motion and what determines these motions is poorly understood. This study diagnoses profiles of area-averaged mesoscale divergence from measurements of horizontal winds collected by an extensive upper-air sounding network of a recent campaign over the western tropical North Atlantic, the Elucidating the Role of Clouds-Circulation Coupling in Climate (EUREC 4 A) campaign. Observed area-averaged divergence amplitudes scale approximately inversely with area equivalent radius. This functional dependence is also confirmed in reanalysis data and a global freely-evolving simulation run at 2.5 km horizontal resolution. Based on the numerical data it is demonstrated that the energy spectra of inertia gravity waves can explain the scaling of divergence amplitudes with area. At individual times, however, few waves can dominate the region. Nearly monochromatic tropospheric waves are diagnosed in the soundings by means of an optimized hodograph analysis. For one day, results suggest that an individual wave directly modulated the satellite-observed cloud pattern. However, because such immediate wave impacts are rare, the systematic modulation of vertical motion due to inertia-gravity waves may be more relevant as a convection-modulating factor. The analytic relationship between energy spectra and divergence amplitudes proposed in this article, if confirmed by future studies, could be used to design better external forcing methods for regional models. Text North Atlantic Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description How convection couples to mesoscale vertical motion and what determines these motions is poorly understood. This study diagnoses profiles of area-averaged mesoscale divergence from measurements of horizontal winds collected by an extensive upper-air sounding network of a recent campaign over the western tropical North Atlantic, the Elucidating the Role of Clouds-Circulation Coupling in Climate (EUREC 4 A) campaign. Observed area-averaged divergence amplitudes scale approximately inversely with area equivalent radius. This functional dependence is also confirmed in reanalysis data and a global freely-evolving simulation run at 2.5 km horizontal resolution. Based on the numerical data it is demonstrated that the energy spectra of inertia gravity waves can explain the scaling of divergence amplitudes with area. At individual times, however, few waves can dominate the region. Nearly monochromatic tropospheric waves are diagnosed in the soundings by means of an optimized hodograph analysis. For one day, results suggest that an individual wave directly modulated the satellite-observed cloud pattern. However, because such immediate wave impacts are rare, the systematic modulation of vertical motion due to inertia-gravity waves may be more relevant as a convection-modulating factor. The analytic relationship between energy spectra and divergence amplitudes proposed in this article, if confirmed by future studies, could be used to design better external forcing methods for regional models.
format Text
author Stephan, Claudia Christine
Mariaccia, Alexis
spellingShingle Stephan, Claudia Christine
Mariaccia, Alexis
The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion
author_facet Stephan, Claudia Christine
Mariaccia, Alexis
author_sort Stephan, Claudia Christine
title The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion
title_short The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion
title_full The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion
title_fullStr The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion
title_full_unstemmed The signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion
title_sort signature of the tropospheric gravity wave background in observed mesoscale motion
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-2020-61
https://wcd.copernicus.org/preprints/wcd-2020-61/
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source eISSN: 2698-4016
op_relation doi:10.5194/wcd-2020-61
https://wcd.copernicus.org/preprints/wcd-2020-61/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-2020-61
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