Submitting Campus

Daytona Beach

Department

Physical Sciences

Document Type

Article

Publication/Presentation Date

9-16-2018

Abstract/Description

Gravity waves not subject to breaking or filtering will dissipate due to viscosity and thermal conduction in the thermosphere. However, the evolutions of wave packets, and the altitudes they reach, are highly dependent upon the spectral content. In this paper, a 2‐D numerical model is used to investigate the effect of spatial localization (and thus spectral content) of a wave packet on its dissipation, dispersion, and spectral evolution. It is found that most wave packets launched below the thermosphere evolve to smaller central vertical wavelengths as the faster, longer vertical wavelength components reach the dissipative thermosphere and are removed first, leaving the shorter, slower components to become dominant at later times. This effect is greater for more spatially localized packets (spectrally broadband) as rapid dispersion leads to the rapid spreading of the wave over large altitude regions that could be interpreted as different waves (i.e., from different sources) by instruments observing different altitudes. Dispersion can also be accelerated by the refractive effects of the thermospheric temperature gradient. Initially, Gaussian broadband packets can evolve into asymmetric distributions which are not well described by standard assumptions (e.g., Gaussian packets), requiring instead numerical simulation to properly describe them. In the case that the vertical scale is smaller than the scale height, and dissipation acts immediately on the packet (i.e., it is generated in situ in the dissipative thermosphere), then the scale‐dependent nature of dissipation removes the shorter wavelengths components first, leading to the spectrum evolving toward larger vertical wavelengths.

Publication Title

Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1029/2017JD027617

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Grant or Award Name

NSF grants AGS-1151746 and AGS-1344356, NSF grant AGS-1344350

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