Litcius/Paper detail

Gravity Wave Weakening During the 2019 Antarctic Stratospheric Sudden Warming

Masaru Kogure, Jia Yue, Huixin Liu

2021Geophysical Research Letters20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract A rare Antarctic stratospheric sudden warming (SSW) occurred on August 30, 2019, and was a minor warming event. We investigated variations in gravity wave (GW) activity before and after this Antarctic SSW event using two satellite measurements (AIRS and CIPS) and reanalysis data (GEOS‐5 FP). GW activity over the Andes decreased after August 30, although the westerly wind was 40–60 ms −1 and cannot filter out GWs with small zonal phase speed. This decline over the Andes was probably caused by wave saturation. Zonal mean GW activity over Antarctica and the Southern Ocean likewise decreased, with a weakening of zonal wind. The zonal mean GW activity further decreased around September 8 which coincided with a reversal of the zonal mean zonal wind at 40 km. The decline in the zonal mean GW activity after August 30 was probably caused by wind filtering and polar night jet breaking.

Topics & Concepts

ClimatologyGeologyAtmospheric sciencesSudden stratospheric warmingPolarPolar vortexStratosphereGravity waveEnvironmental scienceGravitational wavePhysicsAstronomyAstrophysicsAtmospheric Ozone and ClimateIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsClimate variability and models