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Subscriber Access to Full Article (Nonsubscribers may purchase for $9.00, Includes print PDF)
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 103, NO. D6,
PAGES 6427–6437,
1998
Observational limits for lidar, radar, and airglow imager measurements of gravity wave parameters
Chester S. Gardner
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Michael J. Taylor
Space Dynamics Laboratory, Utah State University, Logan
Abstract
By examining the observational limits and biases for lidar, radar, and airglow imager measurements of middle atmosphere gravity
waves, we provide plausible explanations for the characteristics of the monochromatic wave parameters that have been reported
during the past decade. The systematic dependencies of vertical and horizontal wavelength on wave period, reported in many
lidar and some radar studies, are associated with diffusive damping. The prominent waves with the largest amplitudes, most
often observed by lidars and radars, are those with vertical phase speeds near the diffusive damping limit. The narrow range
of horizontal phase velocities of the waves seen by OH imagers is a consequence of the combined effects of the gravity wave
spectrum and the OH layer response to wave perturbations. The strongest airglow fluctuations are associated with waves having
vertical wavelengths comparable to the width of the OH layer. These waves have fast horizontal phase speeds near 70 m/s. Simple
formulas which describe the regions of the wave spectrum observed by each instrument are derived and compared with published
data. Lidars, radars, and imagers are often most sensitive to waves in largely different regions of the spectrum so that their
measurements are truly complementary. However, these ground-based techniques are often incapable of observing the large-scale
waves with periods longer than about 5 hours and both long vertical (>15 km) and horizontal (>1000 km) wavelengths. Spaceborne
instruments, such as the high-resolution Doppler imager (HRDI) and wind imaging interferometer (WINDII) on UARS, are the techniques
most likely to provide the key observations of the low wavenumber, low-frequency region of the gravity wave spectrum.
Received 9
December
1996;
accepted 19
November
1997.
Subscriber Access to Full Article (Nonsubscribers may purchase for $9.00, Includes print PDF)
Citation: Gardner, C. S., and M. J. Taylor
(1998),
Observational limits for lidar, radar, and airglow imager measurements of gravity wave parameters,
J. Geophys. Res.,
103(D6),
6427–6437.
Copyright 1998 by the American Geophysical Union.
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