Momentum flux estimates accompanying multiscale gravity waves over Mount Cook, New Zealand, on 13 july 2014 during the DEEPWAVE campaign

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Abstract

Observations performed with a Rayleigh lidar and an Advanced Mesosphere TemperatureMapper aboard the National Science Foundation/National Center for Atmospheric Research Gulfstream V research aircraft on 13 July 2014 during the Deep Propagating Gravity Wave Experiment (DEEPWAVE) measurement program revealed a large-amplitude, multiscale gravity wave (GW) environment extending from ~20 to 90km on flight tracks over Mount Cook, New Zealand. Data from four successive flight tracks are employed here to assess the characteristics and variability of the larger- and smaller-scale GWs, including their spatial scales, amplitudes, phase speeds, and momentum fluxes. On each flight, a large-scale mountain wave (MW) having a horizontal wavelength ~200-300 km was observed. Smaller-scale GWs over the island appeared to correlate within the warmer phase of this large-scale MW. This analysis reveals that momentum fluxes accompanying small-scale MWs and propagating GWs significantly exceed those of the large-scale MW and the mean values typical for these altitudes, with maxima for the various small-scale events in the range ~20-105m-2. s-2.

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Bossert, K., Fritts, D. C., Pautet, P. D., Williams, B. P., Taylor, M. J., Kaifler, B., … MacKinnon, A. D. (2015). Momentum flux estimates accompanying multiscale gravity waves over Mount Cook, New Zealand, on 13 july 2014 during the DEEPWAVE campaign. Journal of Geophysical Research, 120(18), 9323–9337. https://doi.org/10.1002/2015JD023197

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