The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations

On 6 January 1992 measurements of a mountain wave with significant amplitude were taken over the southern tip of Greenland during an ER-2 flight at an altitude of about 20 km. This work focuses on 3D numerical simulations of the wave generation and its propagation into the stratosphere during this e...

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Main Authors: Leutbecher, Martin, Volkert, Hans
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Meteorological Society 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/52854/
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author Leutbecher, Martin
Volkert, Hans
author_facet Leutbecher, Martin
Volkert, Hans
author_sort Leutbecher, Martin
collection Unknown
description On 6 January 1992 measurements of a mountain wave with significant amplitude were taken over the southern tip of Greenland during an ER-2 flight at an altitude of about 20 km. This work focuses on 3D numerical simulations of the wave generation and its propagation into the stratosphere during this event. The sensitivity of the simulated mountain wave to surface friction and horizontal resolution is explored. A nonhydrostatic model is used for experiments with horizontal resolutions of 12, 4, and 1.3 km. In all simulations the flow over the southern tip of Greenland generates a mountain wave, which propagates into the stratosphere. Changes of surface friction and horizontal resolution affect mostly the amplitude of the mountain wave. Increasing surface friction on the slopes reduces the amplitude of the excited orographic gravity wave. Horizontal diffusion required for numerical stability attenuates gravity waves during their propagation into the stratosphere. Increasing the horizontal resolution permits a smaller diffusion and thereby results in larger stratospheric wave amplitudes. The experiment with increased surface friction at 1.3-km horizontal resolution shows the best agreement with the observational data of the wave in the stratosphere. The differences between the simulated and measured amplitudes of vertical displacement and temperature anomaly are less than about 20%. The disparity in vertical velocity is larger; downward velocities were observed up to 4.8 m s21 and simulated up to 2.7 m s21. In the experiments with lower surface friction at 4-km resolution, the accuracy regarding the amplitude of vertical displacement and temperature anomalies is similar, but the simulated maximum downdraft is even weaker. The other experiments with increased surface friction at 4-km resolution and normal friction at 12-km resolution significantly underestimate the wave amplitude. The results of the experiments suggest that the generation of orographic gravity waves and their propagation into the stratosphere can be ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
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op_relation https://elib.dlr.de/52854/1/2000-leutb-hv-jas.pdf
Leutbecher, Martin und Volkert, Hans (2000) The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 57, Seiten 3090-3108. American Meteorological Society. ISSN 0022-4928.
publishDate 2000
publisher American Meteorological Society
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spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:52854 2025-06-15T14:28:29+00:00 The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations Leutbecher, Martin Volkert, Hans 2000 application/pdf https://elib.dlr.de/52854/ en eng American Meteorological Society https://elib.dlr.de/52854/1/2000-leutb-hv-jas.pdf Leutbecher, Martin und Volkert, Hans (2000) The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 57, Seiten 3090-3108. American Meteorological Society. ISSN 0022-4928. Wolkenphysik und Verkehrsmeteorologie Zeitschriftenbeitrag PeerReviewed 2000 ftdlr 2025-06-04T04:58:08Z On 6 January 1992 measurements of a mountain wave with significant amplitude were taken over the southern tip of Greenland during an ER-2 flight at an altitude of about 20 km. This work focuses on 3D numerical simulations of the wave generation and its propagation into the stratosphere during this event. The sensitivity of the simulated mountain wave to surface friction and horizontal resolution is explored. A nonhydrostatic model is used for experiments with horizontal resolutions of 12, 4, and 1.3 km. In all simulations the flow over the southern tip of Greenland generates a mountain wave, which propagates into the stratosphere. Changes of surface friction and horizontal resolution affect mostly the amplitude of the mountain wave. Increasing surface friction on the slopes reduces the amplitude of the excited orographic gravity wave. Horizontal diffusion required for numerical stability attenuates gravity waves during their propagation into the stratosphere. Increasing the horizontal resolution permits a smaller diffusion and thereby results in larger stratospheric wave amplitudes. The experiment with increased surface friction at 1.3-km horizontal resolution shows the best agreement with the observational data of the wave in the stratosphere. The differences between the simulated and measured amplitudes of vertical displacement and temperature anomaly are less than about 20%. The disparity in vertical velocity is larger; downward velocities were observed up to 4.8 m s21 and simulated up to 2.7 m s21. In the experiments with lower surface friction at 4-km resolution, the accuracy regarding the amplitude of vertical displacement and temperature anomalies is similar, but the simulated maximum downdraft is even weaker. The other experiments with increased surface friction at 4-km resolution and normal friction at 12-km resolution significantly underestimate the wave amplitude. The results of the experiments suggest that the generation of orographic gravity waves and their propagation into the stratosphere can be ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland Unknown Greenland
spellingShingle Wolkenphysik und Verkehrsmeteorologie
Leutbecher, Martin
Volkert, Hans
The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations
title The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations
title_full The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations
title_fullStr The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations
title_full_unstemmed The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations
title_short The propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: Quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations
title_sort propagation of mountain waves into the stratosphere: quantitative evaluation of three-dimensional simulations
topic Wolkenphysik und Verkehrsmeteorologie
topic_facet Wolkenphysik und Verkehrsmeteorologie
url https://elib.dlr.de/52854/