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Probing gravity waves in the middle atmosphere using infrasound from explosions
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  • Ekaterina Vorobeva,
  • Jelle Daniel Assink,
  • Patrick Joseph Espy,
  • Toralf Renkwitz,
  • Igor Petrovich Chunchuzov,
  • Sven Peter Näsholm
Ekaterina Vorobeva
Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Jelle Daniel Assink
KNMI
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Patrick Joseph Espy
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
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Toralf Renkwitz
Leibniz-Institute of Atmospheric Physics (LG)
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Igor Petrovich Chunchuzov
Institute of Atmospheric Physics
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Sven Peter Näsholm
NORSAR
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Abstract

This study uses low-frequency, inaudible acoustic waves (infrasound) to probe wind and temperature fluctuations associated with breaking gravity waves in the middle atmosphere. Building on an approach introduced by Chunchuzov et al., infrasound recordings are used to retrieve effective sound-speed fluctuations in an inhomogeneous atmospheric layer that causes infrasound backscattering. The infrasound was generated by controlled blasts at Hukkakero, Finland and recorded at the IS37 infrasound station, Norway in the late summers 2014 - 2017. Our findings indicate that the analyzed infrasound scattering occurs at mesospheric altitudes of 50 - 75 km, a region where gravity waves interact under non-linearity, forming thin layers of strong wind shear. The retrieved fluctuations were analyzed in terms of vertical wave number spectra, resulting in approximate kz-3 power law that corresponds to the “universal“ saturated spectrum of atmospheric gravity waves. The kz-3 power law wavenumber range corresponds to vertical atmospheric scales of 33 - 625 m. The fluctuation spectra were compared to theoretical gravity wave saturation theories as well as to independent wind measurements by the Saura medium-frequency radar near Andøya Space Center around 100 km west of IS37, yielding a good agreement in terms of vertical wavenumber spectrum amplitudes and slopes. This suggests that the radar and infrasound-based effective sound-speed profiles represent low- and high-wavenumber regimes of the same “universal“ gravity wave spectrum. The results illustrate that infrasound allows for probing fine-scale dynamics not well captured by other techniques, suggesting that infrasound can provide a complementary technique to probe atmospheric gravity waves.
22 Feb 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
27 Feb 2023Published in ESS Open Archive