A Three-Dimensional Nonhydrostatic Ray-Tracing Model for Gravity Waves: Formulation and Preliminary Results for the Middle Atmosphere
Open Access
- 1 June 1995
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
- Vol. 52 (11) , 1959-1984
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1995)052<1959:atdnrt>2.0.co;2
Abstract
The WKB ray-tracing formalism is extended to accommodate internal gravity waves of all frequencies in a rotating, stratified, and compressible three-dimensional atmosphere. This includes the derivation of equations governing the dispersion and refraction of the ray paths, a realistic wave amplitude equation that takes into account both radiative and turbulent damping effects, and extensions of previous wave saturation schemes to accommodate dynamical and convective instabilities along generally slanted axes. These equations have been numerically coded into a global ray-tracing model that the authors have applied to the three-dimensional CIRA 1986 reference atmosphere model in a series of preliminary experiments to investigate the impact of the newly incorporated features on synthesized wave fields in the middle atmosphere. Three main points emerge from these experiments. First, there is a striking reduction in the high-frequency cutoff with decreasing horizontal wavenumber due to a more complete ... Abstract The WKB ray-tracing formalism is extended to accommodate internal gravity waves of all frequencies in a rotating, stratified, and compressible three-dimensional atmosphere. This includes the derivation of equations governing the dispersion and refraction of the ray paths, a realistic wave amplitude equation that takes into account both radiative and turbulent damping effects, and extensions of previous wave saturation schemes to accommodate dynamical and convective instabilities along generally slanted axes. These equations have been numerically coded into a global ray-tracing model that the authors have applied to the three-dimensional CIRA 1986 reference atmosphere model in a series of preliminary experiments to investigate the impact of the newly incorporated features on synthesized wave fields in the middle atmosphere. Three main points emerge from these experiments. First, there is a striking reduction in the high-frequency cutoff with decreasing horizontal wavenumber due to a more complete ...Keywords
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