“…The wind velocity on SS-AS cells show a strong variability on its zonal component over different time scales, as revealed by several complementary observing techniques such as ground-based wind measurements from Dopplershifted infrared, sub-mm and millimeter lines (Goldstein et al, 1991;Lellouch et al, 1994Lellouch et al, , 2008Clancy et al, 2008;Rengel et al, 2008;Sornig et al, 2008Sornig et al, , 2012Clancy et al, 2012), ground-based and Venus Express/SPICAV observations of non-LTE airglow emission variability on the night side (Ohtsuki et al, 2008;Gérard et al, 2009;Soret et al, 2010Soret et al, , 2012 as well as modeling constraints of the upper mesosphere and lower thermosphere in terms of vertical and latitudinal extension of the cyclostrophic balance approximation Mueller-Wodarg et al, 2006;Brecht et al, 2012). In the upper cloud region the wind variability may be caused by intrusions of the SS-AS return branch, superimposed to the mean zonal flow at low and midlatitudes (Widemann et al, 2007) or, in the polar region, by tidal effects .…”