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2002 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary

International coordinated observation of hectors at the tropical region in the northern Australia

Research Project

Project/Area Number 13573005
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

Allocation TypeSingle-year Grants
Section海外学術
Research Field Meteorology/Physical oceanography/Hydrology
Research InstitutionKYOTO UNIVERSITY

Principal Investigator

TSUDA Toshitaka  Kyoto University, Radio Science Center for Space and Atmosphere, Professor, 宙空電波科学研究センター, 教授 (30115886)

Co-Investigator(Kenkyū-buntansha) HORINOUCHI Takeshi  Kyoto University, Radio Science Center for Space and Atmosphere, Research Associate, 宙空電波科学研究センター, 助手 (50314266)
NAKAMURA Takuji  Kyoto University, Radio Science Center for Space and Atmosphere, Associate Professor, 宙空電波科学研究センター, 助教授 (40217857)
Project Period (FY) 2001 – 2002
KeywordsDAWEX / stratosphere / Hector / cumulous clouds / atmospheric waves / radiosonde / Australia Australia / Darwin
Research Abstract

About 50-100 km offshore from Darwin, which is the central city on the Northern Territory, Australia, the two islands (Buthurst, Melville), called Tiwi Islands, are facing across a narrow strait. The very characteristic isolated type huge cumulonimbus cloud called Hector appears over these islands. We carried out the international common observation campaign (DAWEX: Darwin Area Wave Experiment) around Darwin in October to December, 2001, in order to study the generation of atmospheric waves by cumulonimbus clouds (Hector). In collaboration with the Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BOM), Monash university, and the university of Adelaide, we conducted radiosonde observation campaigns. In order to investigate the horizontal propagation characteristic of the atmospheric waves from the Hector, we selected 3 balloon launch sites; Garden Point on the Tiwi Islands, Darwin and Katherine, which are aligned on a nearly straight line with maximum distance of about 400km. We launches a total of 40 … More radiosondes every 3 hours from the 3 places for over 5 days in 3 periods; the comparatively calm dry season in the middle of October (10/13-18), and the active Hector periods in the second half of November (11/15-20) and mid-December (12/11-16). According to statistics of the balloon burst height, more than 3/4 reached the 25km, about 2/3 exceeded 30km.
From a preliminary analysis of the observed profiles, we detected near the tropopause a persistent wave phenomenon with an oscillation period of about 84 hours. Since there is almost no phase difference among three observation points, this wave seems to have a large horizontal scale. Similar wave activities were also seen in November and December. We extracted the atmospheric gravity waves with a vertical scale smaller than about 3km, and estimated the wave energy from wind velocity and temperature fluctuations. The wave energy was enhanced at 15-20 km and 25-30 km, but, the gravity waves were considerably depressed at 20-25 km. The overall structure of the wave energy seems to correlate with the background zonal winds, though the underlying physical mechanism has not been clarified yet. Less

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Published: 2004-04-14  

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