Publication | Open Access
WINDII airglow observations of wave superposition and the possible association with historical “bright nights”
11
Citations
11
References
2017
Year
Upper AtmosphereEngineeringWave SuperpositionAtmospheric SoundingAtmospheric OpticsGeophysicsWind Imaging InterferometerAtmospheric ScienceWave ComponentsLower AtmosphereMeteorologyMesoscale MeteorologyRadiation MeasurementWindii Airglow ObservationsSpace WeatherLocalized Longitudinal MaximaAtmospheric RadiationSatellite MeteorologyPossible Association
Abstract Longitudinal variations of airglow emission rate are prominent in all midlatitude nighttime O( 1 S) lower thermospheric data obtained with the Wind Imaging Interferometer (WINDII) on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS). The pattern generally appears as a combination of zonal waves 1, 2, 3, and 4 whose phases propagate at different rates. Sudden localized enhancements of 2 to 4 days duration are sometimes evident, reaching vertically integrated emission rates of 400 R, a factor of 10 higher than minimum values for the same day. These are found to occur when the four wave components come into the same phase at one longitude. It is shown that these highly localized longitudinal maxima are consistent with the historical phenomena known as “bright nights” in which the surroundings of human dark night observers were seen to be illuminated by this enhanced airglow.
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