TY - JOUR
T1 - Mesoscale temperature fluctuations induced by a spectrum of gravity waves
T2 - A comparison of parameterizations and their impact on stratospheric microphysics
AU - Bacmeister, Julio T.
AU - Eckermann, Stephen D.
AU - Tsias, Athanasios
AU - Carslaw, Kenneth S.
AU - Peter, Thomas
PY - 1999/6/15
Y1 - 1999/6/15
N2 - Power spectral densities (PSDs) of mesoscale fluctuations of temperature and rate of change of temperature (heating-cooling rate) due to a spectrum of stratospheric gravity waves are derived using canonical spectral forms based on observations and linear gravity wave theory. The parameterization developed here assumes a continuous distribution of horizontal wave phase speeds, as opposed to a previous spectral parameterization in which all waves were assigned stationary ground-based phase speeds. Significantly different heating-cooling rate PSDs result in each case. The differences are largest at small horizontal scales, where the continuous phase-speed parameterization yields heating-cooling rate PSDs that are several orders of magnitude smaller than in the stationary phase-speed parameterization. A simple Monte Carlo method is used to synthesize randomly phased temperature perturbation time series within tagged air parcels using either spectral parameterization. These time series are incorporated into a nonequilibrium, microphysical trajectory-box model to assess the microphysical consequences of each parameterization. Collated results yield a 'natural' geophysical scatter of instantaneous aerosol volumes within air parcels away from equilibrium conditions. The amount of scatter was much smaller when the continuous phase-speed parameterization was used.
AB - Power spectral densities (PSDs) of mesoscale fluctuations of temperature and rate of change of temperature (heating-cooling rate) due to a spectrum of stratospheric gravity waves are derived using canonical spectral forms based on observations and linear gravity wave theory. The parameterization developed here assumes a continuous distribution of horizontal wave phase speeds, as opposed to a previous spectral parameterization in which all waves were assigned stationary ground-based phase speeds. Significantly different heating-cooling rate PSDs result in each case. The differences are largest at small horizontal scales, where the continuous phase-speed parameterization yields heating-cooling rate PSDs that are several orders of magnitude smaller than in the stationary phase-speed parameterization. A simple Monte Carlo method is used to synthesize randomly phased temperature perturbation time series within tagged air parcels using either spectral parameterization. These time series are incorporated into a nonequilibrium, microphysical trajectory-box model to assess the microphysical consequences of each parameterization. Collated results yield a 'natural' geophysical scatter of instantaneous aerosol volumes within air parcels away from equilibrium conditions. The amount of scatter was much smaller when the continuous phase-speed parameterization was used.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0032744633
U2 - 10.1175/1520-0469(1999)056<1913:MTFIBA>2.0.CO;2
DO - 10.1175/1520-0469(1999)056<1913:MTFIBA>2.0.CO;2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0032744633
SN - 0022-4928
VL - 56
SP - 1913
EP - 1924
JO - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
JF - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
IS - 12
ER -