MLS GW Variances due to Tropospheric Deep Convection
    During December-February MLS GW variances show strong wave activities over the tropospheric deep convection zones in the subtropics of the southern hemisphere. These activities are centered at southern Africa, northern Australia, and souther America. In previous analyses with MLS data, the variances were smoothed over a large area to improve GW signal-to-noise ratios. As a result, only planetary-scale features were able to visualize.
    With the recently improved 4-point variances, we do not need to smooth the maps so that many details on convection-induced GWs can be investigated. In these color maps, the variances are averaged into 4deg x 10 deg latitutde-longtitude bins. Note that these convection-related GW activities tight closely to the topography, including small islands in the south Pacific. The storm systems over oceans generally produce weaker GW variances compared to those hitting the east side of land masses. Stratospheric wind profiles are important for these GWs to propagate into the upper atmosphere. Plotted in dotted lines are the UKMO total wind, sqrt(U^2+V^2) averaged between 34-44km and sampled at the same localations as with MLS.
map of MLS gravity wave variances from season DJF 1991-1997 at 38km
map of MLS gravity wave variances from season DJF 1991-1997 at 48km
Previous results by McLandress, et al., [2000]

maps of previous non-MLS results of gravity wave variances from DJF season of 1995-1997, both ascending and descending