Solar Cycle and Long-Term Trends in the Observed Peak of the Meteor Altitude Distributions by Meteor Radars
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30006Date
2023-01-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Dawkins, E.C.M.; Stober, G.; Janches, D.; Carrillo-Sánchez, J.D.; Lieberman, R.S.; Jacobi, C.; Moffat-Griffin, T.; Mitchell, N.J.; Cobbett, N.; Batista, P.P.; Andrioli, V.F.; Buriti, R.A.; Murphy, D.J.; Kero, J.; Gulbrandsen, Njål; Tsutsumi, M.; Kozlovsky, A.; Kim, J.H.; Lee, C.; Lester, M.Abstract
The mesosphere/lower thermosphere (MLT, 80–100 km) region is an important boundary
between Earth's atmosphere below and space above and may act as a sensitive indicator for anthropogenic
climate change. Existing observational and modeling studies have shown the middle atmosphere and the MLT
is cooling and contracting because of increasing greenhouse gas emissions. However, trend analyses are highly
sensitive to the time periods covered, their length, and the measurement type and methodology used. We
present for the first time the linear and 11-year solar cycle responses in the meteor ablation altitude distributions
observed by 12 meteor radars at different locations. Decreasing altitudes were seen at all latitudes (linear trends
varying from −10.97 to −817.95 m dec−1), and a positive correlation with solar activity was seen for most
locations. The divergence of responses at high latitudes indicates an important and complex interplay between
atmospheric changes and dynamics at varying time scales.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Dawkins, Stober, Janches, Carrillo-Sánchez, Lieberman, Jacobi, Moffat-Griffin, Mitchell, Cobbett, Batista, Andrioli, Buriti, Murphy, Kero, Gulbrandsen, Tsutsumi, Kozlovsky, Kim, Lee, Lester. Solar Cycle and Long-Term Trends in the Observed Peak of the Meteor Altitude Distributions by Meteor Radars. Geophysical Research Letters. 2023;50(2)Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2023 The Author(s)