Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003

Atmospheric gravity waves have been the subject of intense research for several decades because of their extensive effects on the atmospheric circulation and the temperature structure. The U. Bonn lidar at the Esrange and the ALOMAR RMR lidar at the Andøya Rocket Range are located in northern Scandi...

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Main Authors: Blum, U., Fricke, K.H., Baumgarten, G., Schöch, A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: München : European Geopyhsical Union 2004
Subjects:
550
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.34657/1247
https://oa.tib.eu/renate/handle/123456789/310
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spelling ftleibnizopen:oai:oai.leibnizopen.de:-hN2DYsBBwLIz6xGbuH5 2023-11-05T03:32:06+01:00 Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003 Blum, U. Fricke, K.H. Baumgarten, G. Schöch, A. 2004 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.34657/1247 https://oa.tib.eu/renate/handle/123456789/310 eng eng München : European Geopyhsical Union CC BY-NC-SA 2.5 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 4, Issue 3, Page 809-816 550 article Text 2004 ftleibnizopen https://doi.org/10.34657/1247 2023-10-08T23:17:20Z Atmospheric gravity waves have been the subject of intense research for several decades because of their extensive effects on the atmospheric circulation and the temperature structure. The U. Bonn lidar at the Esrange and the ALOMAR RMR lidar at the Andøya Rocket Range are located in northern Scandinavia 250 km apart on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountain ridge. During January and February 2003 both lidar systems conducted measurements and retrieved atmospheric temperatures. On 19/20 January 2003 simultaneous measurements for more than 7 h were possible. Although during most of the campaign time the atmosphere was not transparent for the propagation of orographically induced gravity waves, they were nevertheless observed at both lidar stations with considerable amplitudes during these simultaneous measurements. And while the source of the observed waves cannot be determined unambiguously, the observations show many characteristics of orographically excited gravity waves. The wave patterns at ALOMAR show a random distribution with time whereas at the Esrange a persistency in the wave patterns is observable. This persistency can also be found in the distribution of the most powerful vertical wavelengths. The mode values are both at about 5 km vertical wavelength, however the distributions are quite different, narrow at the Esrange with values from λz=2–6 km and broad at ALOMAR, covering λz=1–12 km vertical wavelength. In particular the difference between the observations at ALOMAR and at the Esrange can be understood by different orographic conditions while the propagation conditions were quite similar. At both stations the waves deposit energy in the atmosphere with increasing altitude, which leads to a decrease of the observed gravity wave potential energy density with altitude. The meteorological situation during these measurements was different from common winter situations. The ground winds were mostly northerlies, changed in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere to westerlies and ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Andøya LeibnizOpen (The Leibniz Association)
institution Open Polar
collection LeibnizOpen (The Leibniz Association)
op_collection_id ftleibnizopen
language English
topic 550
spellingShingle 550
Blum, U.
Fricke, K.H.
Baumgarten, G.
Schöch, A.
Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003
topic_facet 550
description Atmospheric gravity waves have been the subject of intense research for several decades because of their extensive effects on the atmospheric circulation and the temperature structure. The U. Bonn lidar at the Esrange and the ALOMAR RMR lidar at the Andøya Rocket Range are located in northern Scandinavia 250 km apart on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountain ridge. During January and February 2003 both lidar systems conducted measurements and retrieved atmospheric temperatures. On 19/20 January 2003 simultaneous measurements for more than 7 h were possible. Although during most of the campaign time the atmosphere was not transparent for the propagation of orographically induced gravity waves, they were nevertheless observed at both lidar stations with considerable amplitudes during these simultaneous measurements. And while the source of the observed waves cannot be determined unambiguously, the observations show many characteristics of orographically excited gravity waves. The wave patterns at ALOMAR show a random distribution with time whereas at the Esrange a persistency in the wave patterns is observable. This persistency can also be found in the distribution of the most powerful vertical wavelengths. The mode values are both at about 5 km vertical wavelength, however the distributions are quite different, narrow at the Esrange with values from λz=2–6 km and broad at ALOMAR, covering λz=1–12 km vertical wavelength. In particular the difference between the observations at ALOMAR and at the Esrange can be understood by different orographic conditions while the propagation conditions were quite similar. At both stations the waves deposit energy in the atmosphere with increasing altitude, which leads to a decrease of the observed gravity wave potential energy density with altitude. The meteorological situation during these measurements was different from common winter situations. The ground winds were mostly northerlies, changed in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere to westerlies and ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Blum, U.
Fricke, K.H.
Baumgarten, G.
Schöch, A.
author_facet Blum, U.
Fricke, K.H.
Baumgarten, G.
Schöch, A.
author_sort Blum, U.
title Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003
title_short Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003
title_full Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003
title_fullStr Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003
title_full_unstemmed Simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the Scandinavian mountains: A case study on 19/20 January 2003
title_sort simultaneous lidar observations of temperatures and waves in the polar middle atmosphere on the east and west side of the scandinavian mountains: a case study on 19/20 january 2003
publisher München : European Geopyhsical Union
publishDate 2004
url https://doi.org/10.34657/1247
https://oa.tib.eu/renate/handle/123456789/310
genre Andøya
genre_facet Andøya
op_source Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 4, Issue 3, Page 809-816
op_rights CC BY-NC-SA 2.5 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.34657/1247
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