Time-Lapse of gravity wave action from the Tama, Iowa KCCI-TV webcam on 6 May 2007 A gravity wave is a vertical wave. The best example I can think of in describing what a gravity wave looks like is to think of a rock being thrown into a pond. Ripples or circles migrate from the point the rock hits the water. An up and down motion is created. With increasing distance from the point where the rock hit the water, the waves becomes less defined (the waves are dampening). Now let's look at what a gravity wave is in the atmosphere. To start a gravity wave, a TRIGGER mechanism must cause the air to be displaced in the vertical. Examples of trigger mechanisms that produce gravity waves are mountains and thunderstorm updrafts. To generate a gravity wave, the air must be forced to rise in STABLE air. Why? Because if air rises in unstable air it will continue to rise and will NOT create a wave pattern. If air is forced to rise up in stable air, the natural tendency will be for the air to sink back down over time (usually because the parcel forced to rise is colder than the environment). The momentum of the air imparted by the trigger mechanism will force the parcel to rise and the stability of the atmosphere will force the parcel of air to sink after it rises (you have now undergone the first steps into creating a wave)... http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=054_1178556222&p=1
i uhh.. don't quite understand the entire explanatory passage about how a wave works or is created. -sweat
Wow, hard to imagine a vertical gravity wave if there was no vid to show! Had to read the text 3 times before I fully understood what it was about. Hmm, I think I would be quite scared if I saw that in the air without ever having read about this gravity wave...-sweat (my fantasy sometimes runs away with me and watching Dr. Who and other Sci-Fi stuff doesn't help much)