New results on the mid-latitude midnight temperature maximum
Fabry–Perot interferometer (FPI) measurements of thermospheric temperatures and winds show the detection and successful determination of the latitudinal distribution of the midnight temperature maximum (MTM) in the continental mid-eastern United States. These results were obtained through the op...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2018-04-01
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Series: | Annales Geophysicae |
Online Access: | https://www.ann-geophys.net/36/541/2018/angeo-36-541-2018.pdf |
Summary: | Fabry–Perot interferometer (FPI) measurements of
thermospheric temperatures and winds show the detection and successful
determination of the latitudinal distribution of the midnight temperature
maximum (MTM) in the continental mid-eastern United States. These results
were obtained through the operation of the five FPI observatories in the
North American Thermosphere Ionosphere Observing Network (NATION) located at
the Pisgah Astronomic Research Institute (PAR) (35.2° N,
82.8° W), Virginia Tech (VTI) (37.2° N, 80.4° W),
Eastern Kentucky University (EKU) (37.8° N, 84.3° W),
Urbana-Champaign (UAO) (40.2° N, 88.2° W), and Ann Arbor
(ANN) (42.3° N, 83.8° W). A new approach for analyzing the
MTM phenomenon is developed, which features the combination of a method of
harmonic thermal background removal followed by a 2-D inversion algorithm to
generate sequential 2-D temperature residual maps at 30 min intervals. The
simultaneous study of the temperature data from these FPI stations represents
a novel analysis of the MTM and its large-scale latitudinal and longitudinal
structure. The major finding in examining these maps is the frequent
detection of a secondary MTM peak occurring during the early evening hours,
nearly 4.5 h prior to the timing of the primary MTM peak that generally
appears after midnight. The analysis of these observations shows a strong
night-to-night variability for this double-peaked MTM structure. A
statistical study of the behavior of the MTM events was carried out to
determine the extent of this variability with regard to the seasonal and
latitudinal dependence. The results show the presence of the MTM peak(s) in
106 out of the 472 determinable nights (when the MTM presence, or lack
thereof, can be determined with certainty in the data set) selected for
analysis (22 %) out of the total of 846 nights available. The MTM feature
is seen to appear slightly more often during the summer (27 %), followed
by fall (22 %), winter (20 %), and spring (18 %). Also seen is a
northwestward propagation of the MTM signature with a latitude-dependent
amplitude. This behavior suggests either a latitudinal dependence of
thermosphere tidal dissipation or a night-to-night variation of the
composition of the higher-order tidal modes that contribute to the production
of the MTM peak at mid-latitudes. Also presented in this paper is the
perturbation on the divergence of the wind fields, which is associated with
the passage of each MTM peak analyzed with the 2-D
interpolation. |
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ISSN: | 0992-7689 1432-0576 |