Title: Solar Semidiurnal Tide in the
1Solar Semidiurnal Tide in the Atmosphere
Jeff Forbes Department of Aerospace Engineering
Sciences University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
80309-0429
- Forcing of the Semidiurnal Tide
- Vertical Propagation of the Semidiurnal Tide and
its Interactions with the Overlying Atmosphere - Distortion by Zonal Mean Winds
- Modulation by Longitude Variations in Mean Winds
- (Stationary Planetary Waves)
- Modulation by Traveling Planetary Waves (e.g.,
2-day wave) - Solar Semidiurnal Tide in Mars Dusty Atmosphere
2 The ITM System
400 km
ITM System
60 km
0 km
Pole
Equator
3The semidiurnal tide is just one example from a
whole spectrum of waves that couple different
atmospheric regions and produce observable
phenomena.
4Thermal Excitation of the Semidiurnal Tide
150
100
Height (km)
50
0
5In the local time frame, the heating may be
represented as
Q
6Solar Heating Distribution from a Space-Based
Perspective
To an observer in space, it looks like the
heating bulge (and the tides it generates) are
fixed with respect to the Sun, and the planet is
rotating beneath. To an observer on the
ground, the heating bulge, and the tides it
generates, are moving westward or migrating at
the apparent motion of the Sun.
7Meridional wind field at 103 km (April)
associated with the semidiurnal tide propagating
upward from the lower atmosphere, mainly excited
by UV absorption by O3 in the stratosphere-mesosph
ere
Courtesy M. Hagan
The tide propagates westward with respect to the
surface once per day, and is locally seen as the
same semidiurnal tide at all longitudes.
8(No Transcript)
9UV Absorption by O3
10Tidal Variability
Eastward Winds over Saskatoon, Canada, 65-100 km
Note the transition from easterlies (westerlies)
below 80-85 km to westerlies (easterlies) above
during summer (winter), due to GW filtering and
momentum deposition.
Note the predominance of the semidiurnal tide
at upper levels, with downward phase progression.
Courtesy of C. Meek and A. Manson
11Longitude variations are taken into account with
zonal wavenumbers s ? n.
A spectrum of tides thus exists, to first order
representable as a linear superposition of waves
of various frequencies (n) and zonal wavenumbers
(s)
The waves with s ? n are referred to as
non-migrating tides because they do not migrate
with respect to the Sun to a planetary-fixed
observer.
12200
150
100
Height (km)
50
UV Absorption by O3
13Zonal Mean Winds due to Dissipation of
Semidiurnal Tides
SW2 SW1 SW3
SW2 only
SW1 SW3
Angelats i Coll and Forbes, 2002
14The total atmospheric response to solar forcing
is the result of constructive and destructive
interference between migrating and nonmigrating
tidal components, giving rise to a different
tidal response at each longitude.
TIMED/SABER Semidiurnal Temperatures 110 km
April 2004
Zhang et al., 2006
15(No Transcript)
16400
Penetration into upper thermosphere ionosphere
350
300
Height (km)
50
UV Absorption by O3
17Solar Semidiurnal Tide in the Dusty Mars
Atmosphere
18The Model
- Time-dependent global model of the
mutually-interactive semidiurnal tide and zonal
mean circulation - Parameterization employed to handle convective
instability -- eddy diffusivity introduced to
keep wave amplitude at stable limit. - Heating rates used based on
- observed dust distributions
- validated against surface pressure
- perturbations measured by
- Viking-1and Viking-2 landers.
19Solar Semidiurnal Tide in Mars Atmosphere, Ls
270, High Dust (t 2.3)
Solar Semidiurnal Tide in Earths Atmosphere,
Ozone Heating
Solar Semidiurnal Tide in Mars Atmosphere, Dust
Heating
20Semidiurnal Temperature Perturbation
21Eddy diffusion Coefficient due to Breaking
Semidiurnal Tide
22Zonal Mean Acceleration of the Atmosphere due to
the Dissipating Semidurnal Tide
Zonal Mean Zonal Wind, Low Dust
Zonal Mean Zonal Wind Difference, ? 2.3
23Solar Semidiurnal Tide in the Atmosphere
CONCLUDING REMARKS
- The semidiurnal tide and its effects are
pervasive and ubiquitous in Earths atmosphere - There are new things to be learned, and
probably, to be discovered - The semidiurnal tide is just one example from a
whole spectrum of waves that couple different
atmospheric regions and produce observable
phenomena. - The solar semidiurnal tide is important in
vertically-coupling Mars atmosphere, with
potential importance to aerobraking.