2014
DOI: 10.5194/angeo-32-443-2014
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Simulation of non-hydrostatic gravity wave propagation in the upper atmosphere

Abstract: Abstract. The high-frequency and small horizontal scale gravity waves may be reflected and ducted in non-hydrostatic simulations, but usually propagate vertically in hydrostatic models. To examine gravity wave propagation, a preliminary study has been conducted with a global ionospherethermosphere model (GITM), which is a non-hydrostatic general circulation model for the upper atmosphere. GITM has been run regionally with a horizontal resolution of 0.2 • long × 0.2 • lat to resolve the gravity wave with wavele… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…This implies that the hydrostatic assumption (which precludes such waves) can underestimate the upper thermospheric density response to rapid changes in energy input. The hydrostatic assumption also alters the dispersion relation for high-frequency gravity waves with horizontal wavelengths less than 4πH, where H is the scale height (Akmaev, 2011, section 4.5;Deng and Ridley, 2014b). Deng et al (2008b) pointed out the importance of accounting for height-dependent gravity in thermospheric models, given that gravitational acceleration decreases by about 10% between 100 and 400 km.…”
Section: Physical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This implies that the hydrostatic assumption (which precludes such waves) can underestimate the upper thermospheric density response to rapid changes in energy input. The hydrostatic assumption also alters the dispersion relation for high-frequency gravity waves with horizontal wavelengths less than 4πH, where H is the scale height (Akmaev, 2011, section 4.5;Deng and Ridley, 2014b). Deng et al (2008b) pointed out the importance of accounting for height-dependent gravity in thermospheric models, given that gravitational acceleration decreases by about 10% between 100 and 400 km.…”
Section: Physical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sources are similar to those of gravity waves: wind/topography interaction in the troposphere (Walterscheid and Hickey, 2005), interfering ocean waves (Rind, 1977), seismic activity, and localized auroral heating in the high-latitude thermosphere (Wilson, 2012;Pasko, 2012;Deng and Ridley, 2014b). Rind (1977) estimated that 0.2 Hz ocean-generated waves deposit about as much energy into the thermosphere as gravity waves do.…”
Section: Acoustic Wavesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Global Ionosphere-Thermosphere Model (GITM; Ridley et al, 2006) is a three-dimensional global circulation model for the upper atmosphere. Different from most of the conventional circulation models, GITM relaxes the hydrostatic assumption, has flexible grid resolutions, and short time steps of~2 s. These features make, for example, realization of acoustic-gravity waves (Deng et al, 2008;Deng & Ridley, 2014;Lin et al, 2017;Lin, Deng, & Ridley, 2018), possible. A new photochemistry module was added to GITM for better accounting for the production of NO via meta-state of nitrogen and secondary electrons/photoelectrons to investigate the sensitivity of the global NO cooling power at various solar and geomagnetic activity levels (Lin, Deng, Venkataramani, et al, 2018).…”
Section: Global Ionosphere-thermosphere Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using its neutral atmospheric output to drive a self‐consistent ionosphere model, Zettergren and Snively [, ] have also investigated the ionospheric response to acoustic waves generated by sources of different spatial and temporal scales. The necessity of including compressibility in the GW calculation without hydrostatic assumption is also demonstrated by the GCM results [ Deng et al ., ; Deng and Ridley , ]. Meanwhile, hemispheric coupling of the ionospheric response to lower atmospheric perturbations is observed in the SAMI3 (Sami3 is Also a Model of the Ionosphere) simulations [ Huba et al ., ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%