Abstract. Studies of transitionally dense meteor trails using radars which employ specularly reflecting interferometric techniques are used to show that measurable hightemperature chemistry exists at timescales of a few tenths of a second after the formation of these trails. This is a process which is distinct from the ambient-temperature chemistry that is already known to exist at timescales of tens of seconds and longer in long-lived trails. As a consequence, these transitionally dense trails have smaller lifetimes than might be expected if diffusion were the only mechanism for reducing the mean trail electron density. The process has been studied with four SKiYMET radars at latitudes varying from 10 to 75 • N, over a period of more than 10 years, 24 h per day. In this paper we present the best parameters to use to represent this behaviour and demonstrate the characteristics of the temporal and latitudinal variability in these parameters. The seasonal, day-night and latitudinal variations correlate reasonably closely with the corresponding variations of ozone in the upper mesosphere. Possible reasons for these effects are discussed, but further investigations of any causative relation are still the subject of ongoing studies.
Abstract. This paper presents a study of diurnal tidal winds
observed simultaneously by two meteor radars located on each side of the
Equator in the equatorial region. The radars were located in Santa Cruz, Costa Rica
(10.3∘ N, 85.6∘ W) (hereafter CR) and
São João do Cariri, Brazil (7.4∘ S, 36.5∘ W) (hereafter CA). The distance between the sites is 5800 km. Harmonic analysis
has been used to obtain amplitudes and phases (hour of peak amplitude) for
diurnal, semidiurnal and terdiurnal tides between 82 and 98 km altitude, but
in this work we concentrate on the diurnal component. The period of
observation was from April 2005 to January 2006. The results were compared
to the Global Scale Waves Model (GSWM-09). Magnitudes of zonal and meridional amplitudes from
November to January for CR were quite different from the predictions of the
model. Concerning phases, the agreement between model and radar meridional
tidal phases at each site was good, and a vertical wavelength of 24 km for
the diurnal tide was observed practically every month, although on some
occasions determination of the vertical wavelength was difficult, especially
for the zonal component, due to nonlinear phase variations with height. For
the diurnal zonal amplitude, there were notable differences between the two
sites. We attribute this site-to-site difference of the diurnal zonal
amplitude to the nonmigrating component of the tide and propose that an
anomaly was present in the troposphere in the winter (Northern Hemisphere)
of 2005–2006 which produced substantial longitudinal variation.
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