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A model study of the effects of winds on concentric rings of gravity waves from a convective plume near Fort Collins on 11 May 2004

105

Citations

39

References

2009

Year

Abstract

Using a convective plume model and a ray trace model, we investigate the effects of winds on concentric rings of gravity waves (GWs) excited from a convective plume on 11 May 2004, near Fort Collins, Colorado. We find that winds can shift the apparent center of the concentric rings at z = 87 km from the plume location. We also find that critical level filtering (for GWs with small phase speeds propagating in the same direction as the wind) and wave reflection (for high‐frequency GWs with small horizontal wavelengths propagating in the opposite direction to the wind) prevent many GWs from reaching the OH airglow layer. Additionally, we find that strong winds disrupt the concentric ring patterns, causing distorted “squashed” ring and arc‐like patterns instead. Using a zero wind profile and a representative April mean zonal wind profile, we compare our model results with observations of concentric rings at the Yucca Ridge Field Station (40.7°N, 104.9°W). We find that the model horizontal wavelengths and periods agree reasonably well with the observed data. We also compare the model temperature perturbations with the temperature perturbations calculated from the intensity perturbations. Because the observations show less critical level filtering than from the April wind profile and more critical level filtering than from the zero wind profile, we conclude that the winds on 11 May were likely somewhat smaller than the April zonal wind profile assumed here.

References

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