Classification and scales of Antarctic polar stratospheric clouds using wavelet decomposition
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2005
Abstract:
Polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) observed with a lidar over the French Antarctic station of Dumont d'Urville
(DDU, 66400S; 140010E) in 1996 are classified using backscatter and depolarisation ratio diagrams. Some Type 1
PSCs, called here intermediate-type PSCs, exhibit lidar signals which do not fit the two distinct groups, Types 1a and
1b, of the standard classification. A wavelet decomposition analysis of backscatter and depolarisation ratio highresolution
profiles is performed in order to study the vertical scales of the various PSC layers. This analysis reveals the
presence of small-scale structures in the lidar vertical profiles, which are typical of mesoscale processes associated with
the propagation of waves such as gravity waves into the winter stratosphere. When these small-scale structures are
filtered out of the lidar profiles, most of the intermediate PSCs detected in the original data disappear, indications that
the layers of intermediate PSCs must be relatively thin, possibly embedded into wider synoptic Type 1a or 1b layers.
This suggests that intermediate PSCs observed over DDU in 1996 tended to form during rapid and small-scale
perturbations associated with mesoscale processes. The lidar signal of intermediate-type PSCs may simply reflect the
sampling of rapidly evolving PSCs, supporting the view of these intermediate PSCs as transition-type PSCs. It is worth
noticing that the vertical scale of theses processes cannot be fully resolved in meteorological analysis or satellite data.
High-resolution data are required to investigate these transition-type PSCs.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Snels, Marcellinus
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