Determination of gravity wave parameters in the airglow combining photometer and imager data
Mesospheric airglow measurements of two or three layers were used to characterize both vertical and horizontal parameters of gravity waves. The data set was acquired coincidentally from a multi-channel filter (Multi-3) photometer and an all-sky imager located at São João do Cariri (7.4∘ S, 36.5∘ W)...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annales geophysicae (1988) 2018-05, Vol.36 (3), p.705-715 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Mesospheric airglow measurements of two or three layers were used
to characterize both vertical and horizontal parameters of gravity waves. The
data set was acquired coincidentally from a multi-channel filter (Multi-3)
photometer and an all-sky imager located at São João do Cariri
(7.4∘ S, 36.5∘ W) in the equatorial region from 2001 to
2007. Using a least-square fitting and wavelet analysis technique, the phase
and amplitude of each observed wave were determined, as well as the amplitude
growth. Using the dispersion relation of gravity waves, the vertical and
horizontal wavelengths were estimated and compared to the horizontal
wavelength obtained from the keogram analysis of the images observed by an
all-sky imager. The results show that both horizontal and vertical
wavelengths, obtained from the dispersion relation and keogram analysis,
agree very well for the waves observed on the nights of 14 October and
18 December 2006. The determined parameters showed that the observed wave on
the night of 18 December 2006 had a period of ∼43.8±2.19 min,
with the horizontal wavelength of 235.66 ± 11.78 km having a downward
phase propagation, whereas that of 14 October 2006 propagated with a period
of ∼36.00±1.80 min with a horizontal wavelength of
∼195±9.80 km, and with an upward phase propagation. The
observation of a wave taken by a photometer and an all-sky imager allowed us
to conclude that the same wave could be observed by both instruments,
permitting the investigation of the two-dimensional wave parameter. Keywords. Atmospheric composition and structure (airglow and aurora) – electromagnetics (wave propagation) – history of geophysics (atmospheric sciences) |
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ISSN: | 1432-0576 0992-7689 1432-0576 |
DOI: | 10.5194/angeo-36-705-2018 |