Global observations of 2 day wave coupling to the diurnal tide in a high‐altitude forecast‐assimilation system

Abstract

We examine wave components in a high-altitude forecast-assimilation system that arise from nonlinear interaction between the diurnal tide and the westward traveling quasi 2 day wave. The process yields a westward traveling “sum” wave with zonal wave number 4 and a period of 16 h, and an eastward traveling “difference” wave with zonal wave number 2 and a period of 2 days. While the eastward 2 day wave has been reported in satellite temperatures, the westward 16 h wave lies outside the Nyquist limits of resolution of twice daily local time satellite sampling. Hourly output from a high-altitude forecast-assimilation model is used to diagnose the nonlinear quadriad. A steady state primitive equation model forced by tide-2 day wave advection is used to intepret the nonlinear wave products. The westward 16 h wave maximizes in the midlatitude winter mesosphere and behaves like an inertia-gravity wave. The nonlinearly generated component of the eastward 2 day wave maximizes at high latitudes in the lower thermosphere, and only weakly penetrates to low latitudes. The 16 h and the eastward 2 day waves are of comparable amplitude and alias to the same apparent frequency when viewed from a satellite perspective.

Description
Keywords
advection, altitude, data assimilation, diurnal variation, forecasting method, global perspective, gravity wave, inertia, mesosphere, nonlinear wave, observational method, steady-state equilibrium, westerly, zonal wind
Citation
Lieberman, R. S., Riggin, D. M., Nguyen, V., Palo, S. E., Siskind, D. E., Mitchell, N. J., et al. (2017). Global observations of 2 day wave coupling to the diurnal tide in a high‐altitude forecast‐assimilation system. 122(8). https://doi.org//10.1002/2016jd025144
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Unported