TY - JOUR
T1 - Global distribution of gravity wave sources and fields in the martian atmosphere during equinox and solstice inferred from a high-resolution general circulation model
AU - Kuroda, Takeshi
AU - Medvedev, Alexander S.
AU - Yiğit, Erdal
AU - Hartogh, Paul
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to three anonymous reviewers for their helpful suggestions. This work was partially supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI Grants 24740317 and 16K05552, the Promotion of the Strategic Research Program for Overseas Assignment of Young Scientists and International Collaborations titled ''Intensification of international collaborations for planetary plasma and atmospheric dynamics research based on the Hawaiian planetary telescopes,'' and German Science Foundation (DFG) Grant ME2752/3-1. The model runs have been performed with the HITACHI SR16000 System (yayoi) at the Information Technology Center, the University of Tokyo. EY has been partially funded by the NASA Grant NNX13AO36G.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Results of simulations with a new high-resolution Martian general circulation model (MGCM) (T106 spectral resolution, or ~67-km horizontal grid size) have been analyzed to reveal global distributions of gravity waves (GWs) during the solstice and equinox periods. They show that shorter-scale harmonics progressively dominate with height, and the body force per unit mass (drag) they impose on the larger-scale flow increases. Mean magnitudes of the drag in the middle atmosphere are tens of meters per second per sol, while instantaneously they can reach thousands of meters per second per sol. Inclusion of small-scale GW harmonics results in an attenuation of the wind jets in the middle atmosphere and in the tendency of their reversal. GW energy in the troposphere due to the shortest-scale harmonics is concentrated in the low latitudes for both seasons and is in a good agreement with observations. The vertical fluxes of wave horizontal momentum are directed mainly against the larger-scale wind. Orographically generated GWs contribute significantly to the total energy of small-scale disturbances and to the drag created by the latter. These waves strongly decay with height, and thus the nonorographic GWs of tropospheric origin dominate near the mesopause. The results of this study can be used to better constrain and validate GW parameterizations in MGCMs.
AB - Results of simulations with a new high-resolution Martian general circulation model (MGCM) (T106 spectral resolution, or ~67-km horizontal grid size) have been analyzed to reveal global distributions of gravity waves (GWs) during the solstice and equinox periods. They show that shorter-scale harmonics progressively dominate with height, and the body force per unit mass (drag) they impose on the larger-scale flow increases. Mean magnitudes of the drag in the middle atmosphere are tens of meters per second per sol, while instantaneously they can reach thousands of meters per second per sol. Inclusion of small-scale GW harmonics results in an attenuation of the wind jets in the middle atmosphere and in the tendency of their reversal. GW energy in the troposphere due to the shortest-scale harmonics is concentrated in the low latitudes for both seasons and is in a good agreement with observations. The vertical fluxes of wave horizontal momentum are directed mainly against the larger-scale wind. Orographically generated GWs contribute significantly to the total energy of small-scale disturbances and to the drag created by the latter. These waves strongly decay with height, and thus the nonorographic GWs of tropospheric origin dominate near the mesopause. The results of this study can be used to better constrain and validate GW parameterizations in MGCMs.
KW - General circulation models
KW - Gravity waves
KW - Planetary atmospheres
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U2 - 10.1175/JAS-D-16-0142.1
DO - 10.1175/JAS-D-16-0142.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85003454601
SN - 0022-4928
VL - 73
SP - 4895
EP - 4909
JO - Journals of the Atmospheric Sciences
JF - Journals of the Atmospheric Sciences
IS - 12
ER -