Abstract
The Balloon Lidar Experiment (BOLIDE), which was part of the Polar Mesospheric Cloud Turbulence (PMC Turbo) Balloon Mission has captured vertical profiles of PMCs during a 6d flight along the Arctic circle in July 2018. The high-resolution soundings (20m vertical and 10s temporal resolution) reveal highly structured layers with large gradients in the volume backscatter coefficient. We systematically screen the BOLIDE dataset for small-scale variability by assessing these gradients at high resolution. We find longer tails of the probability density distributions of these gradients compared to a normal distribution, indicating intermittent behaviour. The high occurrence rate of large gradients is assessed in relation to the 15min averaged layer brightness and the spectral power of short-period (5-62min) gravity waves based on PMC layer altitude variations. We find that variability on small scales occurs during weak, moderate, and strong gravity wave activity. Layers with below-average brightness are less likely to show small-scale variability in conditions of strong gravity wave activity. We present and discuss the signatures of this small-scale variability, and possibly related dynamical processes, and identify potential cases for future case studies and modelling efforts.
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CITATION STYLE
Kaifler, N., Kaifler, B., Rapp, M., & Fritts, D. C. (2023). Signatures of gravity wave-induced instabilities in balloon lidar soundings of polar mesospheric clouds. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 23(2), 949–961. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-949-2023
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