Simultaneous wind observations from Mesosphere Stratosphere Troposphere (MST) radar collectively with Global Positioning System (GPS) radiosonde over Gadanki, covering altitude range of 3.6–20 km (January–December 2009; 365 days), divulge the propagation of lower atmospheric waves up to the ionosphere. It is combined with temperature data (20–110 km) observed from Sounding of the Atmosphere using the Broadband Emission Radiometry (SABER) instrument onboard Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics (TIMED) satellite, ionosonde observations, and daily Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR) data acquired from the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA; centered around Gadanki [13.5°N, 79.2°E]) for the same time period. Long‐period oscillations with periodicities of ~64, ~32, and ~21 days are witnessed along with the well‐known oscillations of ~16, ~6.4, and ~5.3 days. Most of the long‐period oscillations are dominantly perceived during the summer months (April–June 2009), which can even exist up to September. These long‐period oscillations are found to propagate from lower tropospheric heights up to ionospheric heights with large vertical wavelengths (~300–400 km, in some cases) near to transition zones of atmospheric layers (e.g., tropopause, stratopause, and mesopause). Signatures of vertical coupling of atmosphere through large vertical wavelengths (indicating possible intraseasonal connections) is clearly observed in the equatorial electrojet current and the peak plasma frequencies of ionospheric layers (E and F regions). Noticeable reduction of the wave oscillations in spatial scale with upsurge in spatial damping is evidently visible, in the tropical stratosphere and mesosphere, which can be attributed to stratospheric ozone.