Abstract
Temperature measurements by vertically staring ground-based Rayleigh
lidars are often used to detect middle atmospheric gravity waves. In
time-height diagrams of temperature perturbations, stationary mountain
waves are identifiable by horizontal phase lines. Vertically tilted
phase lines, on the other hand, indicate that the wave source or the
propagation conditions are transient. Idealized numerical simulations
illustrate that and how a wave source moving in the direction of the
mean wind entails upward-tilted phase lines. The inclination angle
depends on the horizontal wavelength and the wave source’s propagation
speed. On this basis, the goal is to identify and characterize transient
non-orographic gravity waves (NOGWs), e.g., from propagating upper-level
jet/front systems, in virtual and actual Rayleigh lidar measurements.
Compositions of selected atmospheric variables from a meteorological
forecast or reanalysis are thoughtfully combined to associate NOGWs with
processes in the troposphere and stratosphere. For a virtual observation
over the Southern Ocean, upward-tilted phase lines indeed dominate the
time-height diagram during the passage of an upper-level trough. The
example also emphasizes that temporal filtering of temperature
measurements is appropriate for NOGWs, especially in the presence of a
strong polar night jet that implies large vertical wavelengths. During
two selected observational periods of the COmpact Rayleigh Autonomous
Lidar (CORAL) in the lee of the southern Andes, upward-tilted phase
lines are mainly associated with mountain waves and transient background
wind conditions. One nighttime measurement by CORAL coincides with the
passage of an upper-level trough, but large-amplitude mountain waves
superpose the small-amplitude NOGWs in the middle atmosphere.