Polar mesospheric clouds: The year-to-year changes shown in 17 years of images from both hemispheres

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Scientific paper

Meteosat images recorded from December 1983 to December 2000 have been examined systematically to determine the year-to-year change in frequency of occurrence. The statistics from the southern hemisphere are poor because of what appears to be a systematic difference between the two hemispheres with the southern hemisphere showing many fewer days with polar mesospheric clouds present. There is some indication of a local time dependence in the occurrence of the clouds in the northern hemisphere which may arise from the passage of a planetary wave through the regions available for observation from geostationary orbit. There are eleven years in the data when night-to-night observations (NLC) from Europe of noctilucent clouds are available. Comparison of 341 nights using the NLC and the northern satellite data show no significant level of simultaneous occurrence.

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