Prevailing winds in the mesosphere?

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Information on prevailing winds in the mesosphere is limited, with no comprehensive global maps available for this altitude. Current resources, such as Earth.nullschool.net, provide wind data only up to approximately 30 km (10 hPa), which is below the stratopause and the mesosphere. Users seeking mesospheric wind data have found that existing models often require access through academic platforms or are behind paywalls. Google Scholar searches for "prevailing mesospheric winds" yield some model-based results, but these may not offer the straightforward visualizations found for lower altitudes. Institutions like the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado Boulder may have relevant data or models for further exploration.
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Hi! Please, does anyone know where could I find information or (ideally) global maps with the direction and speeds of the prevailing winds in the mesosphere (if any)? As much as I've tried to, I've been unable to find any source providing this information. Thank you in advance!
 
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CapnGranite said:
https://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/surface/level/orthographic=-105.00,0.00,299
This is a global map of wind, weather and ocean conditions. You can choose the global projection and the height of the winds in terms of hPa. I'm not sure it has coverage that high up, but it might.
Thank you very much, CapnGranite. This is certainly a great tool, but unfortunately it only reaches a height of 10 hPa, which is approx. 30 km, well below the stratopause and the mesosphere. :frown: I need to go higher...
 
Bystander said:
Yes, I did that, but I'm still unable to see a worldwide map of prevailing directions/speeds (like the one CapnGranite provided for lower altitudes, if not necessarily so sophisticated.) Maybe it's just me being unable to interpret these data, but I "can't see" the mesospheric winds from point A to point B.

To put it in other words: an atom of nitrogen right now 75 km above Manhattan (or Managua, or Madrid, or Madagascar...), where will it tend to be tomorrow (or in a week)?
 
Not simple. AFAICT, there really are none like what occurs down lower.
Example: This is behind a paywall but does present 'prevailing winds' in a model: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00585-000-0300-y

If you use google scholar and ' prevailing mesospheric winds' you get hits. Most appear to be models. You decide what fits your needs.
 
You might see what the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado Boulder might have.
the http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/
 
CapnGranite said:
You might see what the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado Boulder might have.
the http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/
jim mcnamara said:
Not simple. AFAICT, there really are none like what occurs down lower.
Example: This is behind a paywall but does present 'prevailing winds' in a model: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00585-000-0300-y

If you use google scholar and ' prevailing mesospheric winds' you get hits. Most appear to be models. You decide what fits your needs.
Thank you both very much. I'll try and see if I can get a general idea of the "mesospheric circulation"...
 
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