Miller Steven D, Straka William C, Yue Jia, Smith Steven M, Alexander M Joan, Hoffmann Lars, Setvák Martin, Partain Philip T
Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523;
Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Dec 8;112(49):E6728-35. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1508084112. Epub 2015 Nov 16.
Gravity waves (disturbances to the density structure of the atmosphere whose restoring forces are gravity and buoyancy) comprise the principal form of energy exchange between the lower and upper atmosphere. Wave breaking drives the mean upper atmospheric circulation, determining boundary conditions to stratospheric processes, which in turn influence tropospheric weather and climate patterns on various spatial and temporal scales. Despite their recognized importance, very little is known about upper-level gravity wave characteristics. The knowledge gap is mainly due to lack of global, high-resolution observations from currently available satellite observing systems. Consequently, representations of wave-related processes in global models are crude, highly parameterized, and poorly constrained, limiting the description of various processes influenced by them. Here we highlight, through a series of examples, the unanticipated ability of the Day/Night Band (DNB) on the NOAA/NASA Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership environmental satellite to resolve gravity structures near the mesopause via nightglow emissions at unprecedented subkilometric detail. On moonless nights, the Day/Night Band observations provide all-weather viewing of waves as they modulate the nightglow layer located near the mesopause (∼ 90 km above mean sea level). These waves are launched by a variety of physical mechanisms, ranging from orography to convection, intensifying fronts, and even seismic and volcanic events. Cross-referencing the Day/Night Band imagery with conventional thermal infrared imagery also available helps to discern nightglow structures and in some cases to attribute their sources. The capability stands to advance our basic understanding of a critical yet poorly constrained driver of the atmospheric circulation.
重力波(对大气密度结构的扰动,其恢复力为重力和浮力)构成了低层和高层大气之间能量交换的主要形式。波破碎驱动着高层大气的平均环流,决定了平流层过程的边界条件,进而在各种空间和时间尺度上影响对流层的天气和气候模式。尽管重力波的重要性已得到认可,但人们对高层重力波的特征却知之甚少。知识缺口主要是由于目前可用的卫星观测系统缺乏全球高分辨率观测数据。因此,全球模型中与波相关过程的表示很粗略,高度参数化且约束不足,限制了对受其影响的各种过程的描述。在这里,我们通过一系列例子强调了美国国家海洋和大气管理局/美国国家航空航天局的苏米国家极地轨道伙伴关系环境卫星上的昼夜波段(DNB)具有意想不到的能力,即通过夜辉发射以前所未有的亚公里级细节解析中间层顶附近的重力结构。在无月的夜晚,昼夜波段观测提供了全天候的波观测,因为它们调制了位于中间层顶(平均海平面以上约90公里)附近的夜辉层。这些波由多种物理机制引发,从地形到对流、增强锋面,甚至地震和火山事件。将昼夜波段图像与同样可用的传统热红外图像进行交叉参考,有助于辨别夜辉结构,并在某些情况下确定其来源。这一能力有望推进我们对大气环流中一个关键但约束不足的驱动因素的基本理解。