Infrasound Transmission in the "Shadow Zone" Observed on Balloons in the Lower Stratosphere
Session: Infrasound and the Seismo-Acoustic Wavefield III
Type: Oral
Date: 4/22/2021
Presentation Time: 10:00 AM Pacific
Description:
The temperature and wind structure of the lower atmosphere creates an "acoustic shadow", where infrasound propagation is not expected to occur from a ground based source. This region begins several tens of kilometers from the source and typically ends between one hundred and two hundred kilometers range in the downwind direction of the stratospheric jet. Ground microbarometers still occasionally record acoustic arrivals in this zone due to tropospheric waveguides and/or scattering off of stratospheric structure not accounted for in atmospheric models. However, the properties of these signals in the lower stratosphere (above the tropospheric duct) is unknown, because they have never been previously observed on sensors at these altitudes. Here we present a set of acoustic arrivals from ground explosions recorded on balloons in the lower stratosphere during the MINI-BOOST campaign in Sweden. Although some of the balloons were in the shadow zone, they still recorded a variety of waveforms from each event. Dual payloads on tethers show that the acoustic waves came from below in these instances. We discuss the provenance of these signals and implications for acoustic transmission in regions where geometric ray theory predicts their absence. SNL is managed and operated by NTESS under DOE NNSA contract DE-NA0003525.
Presenting Author: Johan Kero
Student Presenter: No
Authors
Johan Kero Presenting Author Corresponding Author kero@irf.se Swedish Institute of Space Physics |
Daniel Bowman dbowma@sandia.gov Sandia National Laboratories |
Elijah Bird elibird@live.unc.edu The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
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Infrasound Transmission in the "Shadow Zone" Observed on Balloons in the Lower Stratosphere
Category
Infrasound and the Seismo-acoustic Wavefield