MesoS2D: Mesospheric sub-seasonal to decadal predictability
Lead Research Organisation:
British Antarctic Survey
Department Name: Science Programmes
Abstract
In order to accurately predict impacts of space weather and climate variability on the whole atmosphere we need an accurate representation of the whole atmosphere. The mesosphere (~50-95 km altitude) is the most poorly understood region of the atmosphere, it is the critical boundary between two domains (the climate domain and the space weather domain) and this presents a problem when trying to model and predict conditions in the whole atmosphere. Currently the level of prediction in the mesosphere is no better than climatology. Historically there have been few observations of this region to help us characterise it. However, in the past decade or so the number of observations has increased markedly, including multiple middle atmosphere observing satellite missions. We plan to take advantage of this golden age of middle atmosphere observations and together with one of the world most sophisticated whole atmosphere models to quantify the variability and drivers of the mesosphere.
The mesosphere influences, and is influenced by, in-situ and external effects such as atmospheric waves and tides (upward) and space weather effects (downward). The mesosphere is strongly coupled to the lower edge of the ionosphere, as well as the other atmospheric regions, so changes in one part can impact on others. In order to make progress in modelling the whole atmosphere as a coupled system we need to have a sound scientific understanding of the drivers of variability. For climate models we have a good level of predictability for ~2 weeks and one the ~decades scale. However, critically we cannot do this in the mesosphere yet. We aim to focus our efforts on understanding variability on the sub-seasonal to decadal variations in the mesosphere as a pathway to improving model predictions.
We will use the highly instrumented region of Scandinavia, in conjunction with satellite data, to determine the variability of the mesosphere/lower ionosphere and its drivers over a sub seasonal to decadal scale. We will be among the first to use a new, ~£50 million, high-resolution instrument (EISCAT 3D). This will be the world's most sophisticated ionospheric radar which will allow unprecedented small scale measurements of variations in the middle atmosphere. In conjunction with special high-resolution whole atmosphere model simulations, we will determine the drivers and variability of this atmospheric region and provide a first step along the road of improving predictability of the mesosphere at sub-seasonal to decadal timescales.
The mesosphere influences, and is influenced by, in-situ and external effects such as atmospheric waves and tides (upward) and space weather effects (downward). The mesosphere is strongly coupled to the lower edge of the ionosphere, as well as the other atmospheric regions, so changes in one part can impact on others. In order to make progress in modelling the whole atmosphere as a coupled system we need to have a sound scientific understanding of the drivers of variability. For climate models we have a good level of predictability for ~2 weeks and one the ~decades scale. However, critically we cannot do this in the mesosphere yet. We aim to focus our efforts on understanding variability on the sub-seasonal to decadal variations in the mesosphere as a pathway to improving model predictions.
We will use the highly instrumented region of Scandinavia, in conjunction with satellite data, to determine the variability of the mesosphere/lower ionosphere and its drivers over a sub seasonal to decadal scale. We will be among the first to use a new, ~£50 million, high-resolution instrument (EISCAT 3D). This will be the world's most sophisticated ionospheric radar which will allow unprecedented small scale measurements of variations in the middle atmosphere. In conjunction with special high-resolution whole atmosphere model simulations, we will determine the drivers and variability of this atmospheric region and provide a first step along the road of improving predictability of the mesosphere at sub-seasonal to decadal timescales.
Organisations
- British Antarctic Survey (Lead Research Organisation)
- National Institute of Polar Research (Project Partner)
- Utah State University (Project Partner)
- UiT The Arctic University of Norway (Project Partner)
- Nagoya University (Project Partner)
- Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Project Partner)
- University of Leicester (Project Partner)
- University of Oulu (Project Partner)
Publications
Narayanan V
(2023)
Observations of mesospheric gravity waves generated by geomagnetic activity
Narayanan V
(2024)
Observations of Mesospheric Gravity Waves Generated by Geomagnetic Activity
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Ramesh K
(2024)
Long-Term Variability and Tendencies in Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere Winds From Meteor Radar Observations Over Esrange (67.9°N, 21.1°E)
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Ramesh K
(2025)
Long-Term Variability and Tendencies of the Semidiurnal Tide in Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere From Meteor Radar Observations Over Esrange (67.9°N, 21.1°E)
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
| Title | Data from the EISCAT UHF and VHF between 2001- 2021, integrated at 10 minutes and 1 hour between 50-200km |
| Description | We have produced 20-year archives of electron density measurements, at 1 hour and 10-minute integration times, by reanalysing measurements from the EISCAT UHF and VHF radars between 2001-2021. We are specifically looking at altitudes 50-200 km to capture the variability in the Mesosphere Lower Thermosphere Ionosphere (MLT-I) region. We have also separately included power profile data, providing measurements of the raw electron density which can be added (with careful assumptions) to improve data resolution at the lower altitudes. Funding was provided by NERC project NE/V018426/1 (MesoS2D) |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2025 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | This will allow easier analysis of the extensive archive by allowing analysis of mesospheric variability to be studied at a range of timescales. |
| URL | https://data.bas.ac.uk/full-record.php?id=GB/NERC/BAS/PDC/01942 |
| Description | BAS science symposium |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Local |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | A presentation was given at our internal science symposium (to mark the launch of a new science strategy) on the MesoS2D project and it's wider goals |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| Description | Poster presentation |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | One of the PDRAs for the grant presented their work at both the International EiSCAT workshop and a UK based meeting. They presented on: Investigating seasonal to decadal variability in the electron density of the mesosphere using historical EISCAT data |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| Description | poster presentation |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | A poster presentation was made at a UK meeting of the ionospheric-thermospheric community on the MesoS2D work. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
