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Air motions in the tropical stratosphere deduced from satellite tracking of horizontally floating balloons
Authors:James K Angell
Institution:(1) Air Resources Laboratories, NOAA, Silver Spring, Md., USA
Abstract:Between June and November of 1970, 26 constant level balloons were released from Ascension Island (8 S) for flight at 30 and 50 mb. The balloons were positioned by the Interrogation, Recording and Location System (IRLS) aboard the Nimbus D satellite. In general, balloon positioning appeared to be accurate to within a few kilometers, although occasionally there was doubt as to whether the balloon position was to the right or left of the satellite subtrack. Eight of the flights at 50 mb and three of the flights at 30 mb were tracked for more than one month, and one 50 mb flight was tracked continuously for more than 5 months while making 7 circumnavigations of the Earth. From the satellite-determined 12-hourly balloon positions in the tropics, 223 smoothed 24-hour-average zonal and meridional winds were obtained at 30 mb and 693 such winds were obtained at 50 mb. Near the equator the balloons moved from east to west at a speed of about 23 ms–1 at 50 mb and 28 ms–1 at 30 mb, while undergoing a mean northward drift of approximately 0.1 ms–1. The northward drift was a maximum in the Northern Hemisphere winter, suggesting a weak upward extension of the Hadley Cell to 50 mb. Superimposed on this drift were oscillations in meridional velocity of about 2-month period, with these oscillations also most pronounced in the Northern Hemisphere winter. Small (1–3 ms–1) short-period fluctuations in meridional velocity were evident directly above the equator at 50 mb. These waves appear to move westward at speeds of 30–40 ms–1 and to have a wavelength of about 90° longitude. They were responsible for transporting small amounts of westerly momentum into the winter hemisphere. Fluctuations in zonal velocity (Kelvin waves) were also delineated by flights near the equator. These waves appear to move eastward at speeds of 30–40 ms–1 and to have a wavelength of 360° longitude. Some comparisons are made between these IRLS data and the data obtained from GHOST balloon flights at the same heights in early 1969.
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