Browsing by Author "Chau, Jorge L."
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Item Open Access Climatology of mesosphere and lower thermosphere diurnal tides over Jicamarca (12°S, 77°W): observations and simulations(SpringerOpen, 2023-12-14) Suclupe, Jose; Chau, Jorge L.; Conte, Federico J.; Milla, Marco; Pedatella, N. M.; Kuyeng, KarimThis work shows a 3-year climatology of the horizontal components of the solar diurnal tide, obtained from wind measurements made by a multistatic specular meteor radar (SIMONe) located in Jicamarca, Peru (12°S, 77°W). Our observations show that the meridional component is more intense than the zonal component, and that it exhibits its maxima shifted with respect to the equinox times (i.e., the largest peak occurs in August–September, and the second one in April–May). The zonal component only shows a clear maximum in August–September. This observational climatology is compared to a climatology obtained with the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model with thermosphere and ionosphere extension (WACCM-X). Average comparisons indicate that the model amplitudes are 50% smaller than the observed ones. The WACCM-X results are also used in combination with observed altitude profiles of the tidal phases to understand the relative contributions of migrating and non-migrating components. Based on this, we infer that the migrating diurnal tide (DW1) dominates in general, but that from June until September (November until July) the DE3 (DW2) may have a significant contribution to the zonal (meridional) component. Finally, applying wavelet analysis to the complex amplitude of the total diurnal tide, modulating periods between 5 and 80 days are observed in the SIMONe measurements and the WACCM-X model. These modulations might be associated to planetary waves and intraseasonal oscillations in the lower tropical atmosphere.Item Embargo Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere Wind Perturbations Due To the 2022 Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai Eruption as Observed by Multistatic Specular Meteor Radars(American Geophysical Union, 2024-08-06) Chau, Jorge L.; Poblet, Facundo L.; Liu, Hanli; Liu, Alan; Gulbrandsen, Njål; Jacobi, Christoph; Rodriguez, Rodolfo R.; Scipión, Danny; Tsutsumi, MasakiUtilizing multistatic specular meteor radar (MSMR) observations, this study delves into global aspects of wind perturbations in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) from the unprecedented 2022 eruption of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai (HTHH) submarine volcano. The combination of MSMR observations from different viewing angles over South America and Europe, and the decomposition of the horizontal wind in components along and transversal to the HTHH eruption's epicenter direction allow an unambiguous detection and identification of MLT perturbations related to the eruption. The performance of this decomposition is evaluated using Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model with thermosphere/ionosphere extension (WACCM-X) simulations of the event. The approach shows that indeed the HTHH eruption signals are clearly identified, and other signals can be easily discarded. The winds in this decomposition display dominant Eastward soliton-like perturbations observed as far as 25,000 km from HTHH, and propagating at 242 m/s. A weaker perturbation observed only over Europe propagates faster (but slower than 300 m/s) in the Westward direction. These results suggest that we might be observing the so-called Pekeris mode, also consistent with the L1 pseudomode, reproduced by WACCM-X simulations at MLT altitudes. They also rule out the previous hypothesis connecting the observations in South America to the Tsunami associated with the eruption because these perturbations are observed over Europe as well. Despite the progress, the L0 pseudomode in the MLT reproduced by WACCM-X remains elusive to observations.Item Open Access On the Abnormally Strong Westward Phase of the Mesospheric Semiannual Oscillation at Low Latitudes During March Equinox 2023(American Geophysical Union, 2024-08-13) Suclupe, Jose; Chau, Jorge L.; Conte, J. Federico; Pedatella, Nicholas M.; Garcia, Rolando; Sato, Kaoru; Zülicke, Christoph; Lima, Lourivaldo M.; Li, Guozhu; Bhaskara Rao, S. Vijaya; Ratnam, M. Venkat; Rodriguez, Rodolfo; Scipión, DannyDifferent meteor radars at low latitudes observed abnormally strong westward mesospheric winds around the March Equinox of 2023, that is, during the first phase of the Mesospheric Semiannual Oscillation. This event was the strongest of at least the last decade (2014–2023). The westward winds reached −80 m/s at 82 km of altitude in late March, and decreased with increasing altitude and latitude. A considerable increase in the diurnal tide amplitude was also observed. The Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model with thermosphere-ionosphere eXtension constrained to meteorological reanalysis up to ∼50 km does not capture the observed low-latitude behavior. Additionally, these strong mesospheric winds developed during the westerly phase of the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation, in accordance with the filtering mechanism of gravity waves in the stratosphere proposed in previous works. Finally, analysis of SABER temperatures strongly suggests that the breaking of the migrating diurnal tide may be the main driver of these strong winds.Item Restricted VIPIR and 50 MHz radar studies of gravity wave signatures in 150‐km echoes observed at Jicamarca(American Geophysical Union, 2020-08) Reyes, Pablo M.; Kudeki, Erhan; Lehmacher, Gerald A.; Chau, Jorge L.; Milla, MarcoRange‐time‐intensity (RTI) plots of 50 MHz radar backscatter detected at Jicamarca from the 150‐km region of the equatorial ionosphere exhibit necklace‐shaped multilayered structures first reported by Kudeki and Fawcett (1993, https://doi.org/10.1029/93GL01256). The backscatter layers also exhibit quasi‐periodic intensity fluctuations with periods of about 5–15 min and are separated from adjacent layers by thin and undulating regions of no detectible power returns. A study of the fluctuating backscatter layers and undulating gap regions will be presented using VIPIR ionosonde data taken at the Jicamarca Radio Observatory simultaneously with high‐resolution 50‐MHz radar backscatter data. VIPIR virtual reflection height variations in time are noted to match the RTI gap‐region undulations very closely at selected VIPIR frequencies (or, equivalently, electron densities at reflection heights). This matching enables assigning “true heights” to VIPIR virtual height contour maps, and a joint study of the contour maps with the 50‐MHz radar RTI maps strongly suggests that correlated fluctuations and undulations observed in VIPIR and 50‐MHz radar data are indicative of gravity wave‐induced variations in the 150‐km region ionosphere. Accordingly, a complete explanation of the 150‐km echo phenomenon will need to include gravity wave coupling and forcing effects in the enhancement and suppression processes that can account for the observed fluctuations and gap‐region features of necklace‐shaped 150‐km echo maps.