First wind shear observation in PMSE with the tristatic EISCAT VHF radar
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11280Date
2016-11-05Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The Polar Summer Mesosphere has the lowest temperatures that occur in the entire Earth
system. Water ice particles below the optically observable size range participate there in the formation of
strong radar echoes (Polar Mesospheric Summer Echoes, PMSE). To study PMSE we carried out observations
with the European Incoherent Scatter (EISCAT) VHF and EISCAT UHF radar simultaneously from a site
near Tromsø (69.58°N, 19.2272°E) and observed VHF backscattering also with the EISCAT receivers in
Kiruna (67.86°N, 20.44°E) and Sodankylä (67.36°N, 26.63°E). This is one of the first tristatic measurements with
EISCAT VHF, and we therefore describe the observations and geometry in detail. We present observations
made on 26 June 2013 from 7:00 to 13:00 h UT where we found similar PMSE patterns with all three VHF
receivers and found signs of wind shear in PMSE. The observations suggest that the PMSE contains sublayers
that move in different directions horizontally, and this points to Kelvin-Helmholtz instability possibly playing
a role in PMSE formation. We find no signs of PMSE in the UHF data. The electron densities that we derive
from observed incoherent scatter at UHF are at PMSE altitudes close to the noise level but possibly indicate
reduced electron densities directly above the PMSE.
Description
(c) American Geophysical Union, reprinted with permission. Article also available at source: https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JA023080