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EARTH OBSERVATION
Near-Earth space hosts Kelvin-Helmholtz waves
by Brooks Hays
Greenbelt, Md. (UPI) Jul 8, 2015


Study: Stratospheric intrusions bolster California wildfires
Boulder, Colo. (UPI) Jul 8, 2015 - New research suggests it's not just the hot Santa Ana winds that propel California's wildfires. They sometimes arrive alongside an atmospheric phenomenon known as stratospheric intrusions.

In a recent study, researchers at NOAA determined that the winds occasionally pull extremely dry air from the upper atmosphere down to Earth's surface, exacerbating already fire-friendly conditions.

To better understand the affects of intrusions, researchers looked at data collected during California's May 2013 "Springs Fire," a blaze that burned 25,000 acres roughly 50 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

Ozone, wind data and other atmospheric markers revealed the arrival of a stratospheric intrusion on the initial day of the fire, bringing with it an uptick in ozone (O3) and a precipitous drop in humidity. The hot and dry conditions fueled a fast-burning fire until rain arrived a few days later.

The same intrusion triggered pollution warnings at ozone monitoring sites across Southern California. Exposure to ozone pollution can cause lung damage.

"Stratospheric intrusions are double trouble for Southern California," Andrew Langford, a research chemist at NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colorado, explained in a press release. "We knew that the intrusions can add to surface ozone pollution."

"Now we know that they also can contribute to the fire danger, particularly during La NiƱa years when deep intrusions are more frequent, as recently shown by our NOAA colleagues at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory," he said.

The upside of the new findings -- detailed in the journal Geophysical Research Letters -- is that atmospheric models can predict these intrusions.

"The atmosphere could give us an early warning for some wildfires," Langford added, giving officials extra time to intelligently deploy firefighting resources.

Kelvin-Helmholtz waves are everywhere. They're at the beach, deep below the ocean surface, in the clouds -- and also in space.

Researchers have located the waves, recognizable for the rising curl familiar to surfers, on the boundaries of near-Earth space, where -- until recently -- scientists didn't believe they occurred, at least not regularly.

"We have known before that Kelvin-Helmholtz waves exist at the boundaries of Earth's magnetic environment -- but they were considered relatively rare and thought to only appear under specialized conditions," Shiva Kavosi, a space scientist at the University of New Hampshire, said in a press release. "It turns out they can appear under any conditions and are much more prevalent than we thought. They're present 20 percent of the time."

Kavosi is the author a paper on the space waves that was published early this year. But a new paper goes further, offering a possible explanation for their regularity. Researchers at Boston University and Virginia Tech suggest the space waves are caused by a plume of charged gas expelled by Earth's plasmasphere. Their hypothesis is detailed in a new paper published in the Journal of Geophysical Research.

In analyzing data collected by NASA's THEMIS mission, a five-satellite effort to study the magnetosphere, researchers noticed a plasmasphere gas plume contacts the edge of the magnetosphere just prior to the appearance of Kelvin-Helmholtz waves.

The arrival of the plume's charged gas particles may trigger a denser, slower layer along the magnetosphere boundary, while faster solar winds descend from above -- the ideal combo for Kelvin-Helmholtz waves.

The ubiquitous toppling waves require difference in velocity and tension in the waves' various layers. That's what gives the waves their surf-shaped curve.

"The theory of Kelvin-Helmholtz waves is well-developed, but we don't have many observations," said Evan Thomas, a student at Virginia Tech who has been conducting research at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "These new observations show that the waves are happening more often than expected and are probably more important than we thought -- but we still don't know all the details."


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Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 09, 2015
The universe overflows with repeating patterns. From the smallest cells to the largest galaxies, scientists are often rewarded by observing similar patterns in vastly different places. One such pattern is the iconic surfer's waves seen on the ocean - a series of curled hills moving steadily in one direction. The shape has a simple cause. A fast fluid, say wind, moving past a slower one, sa ... read more


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