loading page

Radar observation of extreme vertical drafts in the polar summer mesosphere
  • +7
  • Jorge L. Chau,
  • Raffaele Marino,
  • Fabio Feraco,
  • Juan Miguel Urco Cordero,
  • Gerd Baumgarten,
  • Franz-Josef Luebken,
  • Wayne K. Hocking,
  • Carsten Schult,
  • Toralf Renkwitz,
  • Ralph Latteck
Jorge L. Chau
Leibniz-Institute of Atmospheric Physics at the University of Rostock

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Raffaele Marino
Laboratoire de Mecanique des Fluides et d'Acoustique
Author Profile
Fabio Feraco
Laboratoire de Mecanique des Fluides et d'Acoustique
Author Profile
Juan Miguel Urco Cordero
University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Author Profile
Gerd Baumgarten
Leibniz-Institute of Atmospheric Physics at the Rostock University
Author Profile
Franz-Josef Luebken
Leibniz-Institute of Atmospheric Physics (LG)
Author Profile
Wayne K. Hocking
University of Western Ontario
Author Profile
Carsten Schult
Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics at the University of Rostock
Author Profile
Toralf Renkwitz
Leibniz-Institute of Atmospheric Physics (LG)
Author Profile
Ralph Latteck
Leibniz-Institute of Atmospheric Physics (LG)
Author Profile

Abstract

The polar summer mesosphere is the Earthâ\euro™s coldest region, allowing the formation of mesospheric ice clouds. These ice clouds produce strong polar mesospheric summer echoes (PMSE) that are used as tracers of mesospheric dynamics. Here we report the first observations of extreme vertical drafts ($\pm$50 ms$^{-1}$) in the mesosphere obtained from PMSE, characterized by velocities more than five standard deviations larger than the observed vertical wind variability. Using aperture synthesis radar imaging, the observed PMSE morphology resembles a solitary wave in a varicose mode, narrow along propagation (3–4 km) and elongated ($>10$ km) transverse to propagation direction, with a relatively large vertical extent ($\sim$13 km). These spatial features are similar to previously observed mesospheric bores, but we observe only one crest with much larger vertical extent and higher vertical velocities.
28 Aug 2021Published in Geophysical Research Letters volume 48 issue 16. 10.1029/2021GL094918