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Titel |
Global investigation of the Mg atom and ion layers using SCIAMACHY/Envisat observations between 70 and 150 km altitude and WACCM-Mg model results |
VerfasserIn |
M. P. Langowski, C. von Savigny, J. P. Burrows, W. Feng, J. M. C. Plane, D. R. Marsh, D. Janches, M. Sinnhuber, A. C. Aikin, P. Liebing |
Medientyp |
Artikel
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Sprache |
Englisch
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ISSN |
1680-7316
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Digitales Dokument |
URL |
Erschienen |
In: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics ; 15, no. 1 ; Nr. 15, no. 1 (2015-01-12), S.273-295 |
Datensatznummer |
250119297
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Publikation (Nr.) |
copernicus.org/acp-15-273-2015.pdf |
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Zusammenfassung |
Mg and Mg+ concentration fields in the upper
mesosphere/lower thermosphere (UMLT) region are retrieved from
SCIAMACHY/Envisat limb measurements of Mg and Mg+ dayglow
emissions using a 2-D tomographic retrieval approach. The time
series of monthly mean Mg and Mg+ number density and
vertical column density in different latitudinal regions are
presented. Data from the limb mesosphere–thermosphere mode of
SCIAMACHY/Envisat are used, which cover the 50 to
150 km altitude region with a vertical sampling of ≈3.3 km and latitudes up to 82°. The high
latitudes are not observed in the winter months, because there is no
dayglow emission during polar night. The measurements were
performed every 14 days from mid-2008 until April 2012. Mg
profiles show a peak at around 90 km altitude with a density
between 750 cm−3 and 1500 cm−3. Mg does not
show strong seasonal variation at latitudes below 40°. For higher latitudes
the density is lower and only in the Northern Hemisphere a seasonal cycle with a summer minimum is observed.
The Mg+
peak occurs 5–15 km above the neutral Mg peak altitude.
These ions have a significant
seasonal cycle with a summer maximum in both hemispheres at mid and
high latitudes. The strongest seasonal variations of Mg+ are
observed at latitudes between 20 and 40° and the density at
the peak altitude ranges from 500 cm−3 to
4000 cm−3. The peak altitude of the ions shows
a latitudinal dependence with a maximum at mid latitudes that is up
to 10 km higher than the peak altitude at the equator.
The SCIAMACHY measurements are compared to other measurements and
WACCM model results. The
WACCM results show a significant seasonal variability for Mg with
a summer minimum, which is more clearly pronounced than for SCIAMACHY, and globally
a higher peak density than the SCIAMACHY results.
Although the peak density of both is not in agreement,
the vertical column density agrees well,
because SCIAMACHY and WACCM profiles have different widths.
The agreement between SCIAMACHY and WACCM
results is much better for Mg+ with both showing the same seasonality
and similar peak density. However, there are also minor differences, e.g. WACCM showing
a nearly constant altitude of the Mg+ layer's peak density for all latitudes and seasons. |
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