Gå til innhold

Vitenskapelig tidsskriftpublikasjon

Estimating stratospheric polar vortex strength using ambient ocean-generated infrasound and stochastics-based machine learning

Ekaterina Vorobeva, Mari Dahl Eggen, Alise Danielle Midtfjord, Fred Espen Benth, Patrick Hupe, Quentin Brissaud, Yvan Joseph Georges Emile G. Orsolini, Sven Peter Näsholm

Publikasjonsdetaljer

Tidsskrift: Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, vol. 150, p. 2712-2726, 2024

Dato: 13. juni 2026

Sammendrag:

There are sparse opportunities for direct measurement of upper stratospheric winds, yet improving their representation in subseasonal-to-seasonal prediction models can have significant benefits. There is solid evidence from previous research that global atmospheric infrasound waves are sensitive to stratospheric dynamics. However, there is a lack of results providing a direct mapping between infrasound recordings and polar-cap upper stratospheric winds. The global International Monitoring System (IMS), which monitors compliance with the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, includes ground-based stations that can be used to characterize the infrasound soundscape continuously. In this study, multi-station IMS infrasound data were utilized along with a machine-learning supported stochastic model, Delay-SDE-net, to demonstrate how a near-real-time estimate of the polar-cap averaged zonal wind at 1-hPa pressure level can be found from infrasound data. The infrasound was filtered to a temporal low-frequency regime dominated by microbaroms, which are ambient-noise infrasonic waves continuously radiated into the atmosphere from nonlinear interaction between counter-propagating ocean surface waves. Delay-SDE-net was trained on 5 years (2014–2018) of infrasound data from three stations and the ERA5 reanalysis 1-hPa polar-cap averaged zonal wind. Using infrasound in 2019–2020 for validation, we demonstrate a prediction of the polar-cap averaged zonal wind, with an error standard deviation of around 12 m·s compared with ERA5. These findings highlight the potential of using infrasound data for near-real-time measurements of upper stratospheric dynamics. A long-term goal is to improve high-top atmospheric model accuracy, which can have significant implications for weather and climate prediction.

This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.