Dynamical Coupling Between Hurricane Matthew and the Middle to Upper Atmosphere via Gravity Waves

During 30 September to 9 October 2016, Hurricane Matthew traversed the Caribbean Sea to the east coast of the United States. During its period of greatest intensity, in the central Caribbean, Matthew excited a large number of concentric gravity waves (GWs or CGWs). In this paper, we report on hurric...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geophysical research. Space physics 2019-05, Vol.124 (5), p.3589-3608
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Shuang, Yue, Jia, Xue, Xianghui, Vadas, Sharon L., Miller, Steven D., Azeem, Irfan, Straka, William, Hoffmann, Lars, Zhang, Simin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:During 30 September to 9 October 2016, Hurricane Matthew traversed the Caribbean Sea to the east coast of the United States. During its period of greatest intensity, in the central Caribbean, Matthew excited a large number of concentric gravity waves (GWs or CGWs). In this paper, we report on hurricane‐generated CGWs observed in both the stratosphere and mesosphere from spaceborne satellites and in the ionosphere by ground Global Positioning System receivers. We found CGWs with horizontal wavelengths of ~200–300 km in the stratosphere (height of ~30–40 km) and in the airglow layer of the mesopause (height of ~85–90 km), and we found concentric traveling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs or CTIDs) with horizontal wavelengths of ~250–350 km in the ionosphere (height of ~100–400 km). The observed TIDs lasted for more than several hours on 1, 2, and 7 October 2016. We also briefly discuss the vertical and horizontal propagation of the Hurricane Matthew‐induced GWs and TIDs. This study shows that Hurricane Matthew induced significant dynamical coupling between the troposphere and the entire middle and upper atmosphere via GWs. It is the first comprehensive satellite analysis of gravity wave propagation generated by hurricane event from the troposphere through the stratosphere and mesosphere into the ionosphere. Key Points Concentric gravity waves generated by Hurricane Matthew were seen from the tropopause to the ionosphere on October 2016 These concentric gravity waves had horizontal wavelengths of ~200–350 km Small and large concentric gravity waves observed in airglow layer and ionosphere correlated with Hurricane Matthew's strongest period
ISSN:2169-9380
2169-9402
DOI:10.1029/2018JA026453