Atmospheric Conditions during the Deep Propagating Gravity Wave Experiment (DEEPWAVE)

This paper describes results of a comprehensive analysis of the atmospheric conditions during the DEEPWAVE campaign in austral winter 2014. Different datasets and diagnostics are combined to characterize the background atmosphere from the troposphere to the upper mesosphere. We report on how weather...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Monthly Weather Review
Main Authors: Gisinger, Sonja, Dörnbrack, Andreas, Matthias, Vivien, Doyle, James D., Eckermann, Stephen D., Ehard, Benedikt, Hoffmann, Lars, Kaifler, Bernd, Kruse, Christopher G., Rapp, Markus
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:German
Published: American Meteorological Society 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/113489/
https://elib.dlr.de/113489/1/Gisinger-DeepWave.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1175/MWR-D-16-0435.1
Description
Summary:This paper describes results of a comprehensive analysis of the atmospheric conditions during the DEEPWAVE campaign in austral winter 2014. Different datasets and diagnostics are combined to characterize the background atmosphere from the troposphere to the upper mesosphere. We report on how weather regimes and the atmospheric state compare to climatological conditions and also explore how they relate to the airborne and ground-based gravity wave observations. Key results of this study are the dominance of tropospheric blocking situations and low-level southwesterly flows over New Zealand during June, July, and August 2014. A varying tropopause inversion layer was found to be connected to varying vertical energy fluxes and is, therefore, an important feature with respect to wave reflection. The subtropical jet was frequently diverted south from its climatological position at 30°S and was most often involved in strong forcing events of mountain waves at the Southern Alps. The polar front jet was typically responsible for moderate and weak tropospheric forcing of mountain waves. The stratospheric planetary wave activity amplified in July leading to a displacement of the Antarctic polar vortex. This reduced the stratospheric wind minimum by about 10 m s-1 above New Zealand making breaking of large amplitude gravity waves more likely. Satellite observations in the upper stratosphere revealed that orographic gravity wave variances for 2014 were largest in May, June and July, i.e. the period of the DEEPWAVE field phase.