We present new sensitivity experiments that link observed
anomalies of the mesosphere and lower thermosphere at high
latitudes during the MaCWAVE/MIDAS summer program 2002 to enhanced
planetary Rossby-wave activity in the austral winter troposphere.
We employ the same general concept of a GCM having simplified
representations of radiative and latent heating as in a previous
study by Becker et al. (2004). In the present version, however,
the model includes no gravity wave (GW) parameterization. Instead
we employ a high vertical and a moderate horizontal resolution in
order to describe GW effects explicitly. This is supported by
advanced, nonlinear momentum diffusion schemes that allow for a
self-consistent generation of inertia and mid-frequency GWs in the
lower atmosphere, their vertical propagation into the mesosphere
and lower thermosphere, and their subsequent dissipation which is
induced by prescribed horizontal and vertical mixing lengths as
functions of height.
The main anomalies in northern summer 2002 consist of higher
temperatures than usual above 82 km, an anomalous eastward mean
zonal wind between 70 and 90 km, an altered meridional flow,
enhanced turbulent dissipation below 80 km, and enhanced
temperature variations associated with GWs. These signals are all
reasonably described by differences between two long-integration
perpetual model runs, one with normal July conditions, and another
run with modified latent heating in the tropics and Southern Hemisphere to mimic conditions that correspond to the unusual
austral winter 2002. The model response to the enhanced winter
hemisphere Rossby-wave activity has resulted in both an
interhemispheric coupling through a downward shift of the
GW-driven branch of the residual circulation and an increased GW
activity at high summer latitudes. Thus a quantitative explanation
of the dynamical state of the northern mesosphere and lower
thermosphere during June-August 2002 requires an enhanced Lorenz
energy cycle and correspondingly enhanced GW sources in the
troposphere, which in the model show up in both hemispheres. |