Spectral Analysis of Temperature and Brunt-Väisälä Frequency Fluctuations Observed by Radiosondes
Abstract
Recent studies have revealed that vertical wave number spectra of wind velocity and temperture fluctuations in the troposphere and the lower stratosphere are fairly well explained by a saturated gravity wave spectrum. But N(2) (N:Brunt-Vaisala (BV) frequency) spectra seem to be better for testing the scaling of the vertical wave number spectra in layers with different stratifications, beause its energy density is proportional only to the background value of N(2), while that for temperature depends on both the BV frequency and the potential temperature. From temperature profiles observed in June to August 1987 over the MU Observatory, Japan, by using a radiosonde with 30 m height resolution, N(2) spectra are determined in the 2 to 8.5 km (troposphere) and 18.5 to 25 km (lower stratosphere) ranges. Although individual spectra show fairly large day-by-day variability, the slope of the median of 34 spectra agrees reasonably with the theoretical value of -1 in the wave number range of 6 x 10(-4) similar to 3 x 10(-3) (c/m). The ratio of the spectral energy between these two height regions is about equal to the ratio of N(2), consistent with the prediction of saturated gravity wave theory.
- Publication:
-
Middle Atmosphere Program. Handbook for MAP, volume 27
- Pub Date:
- April 1989
- Bibcode:
- 1989maph...27..461T
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Temperature;
- Brunt-Vaisala Frequency;
- Gravity Waves;
- Temperature Profiles;
- Wind Velocity Measurement;
- Atmospheric Stratification;
- Radiosondes;
- Spectrum Analysis;
- Stratosphere;
- Troposphere;
- Geophysics