American Geophysical Union, Geophysical Research Letters, 22(42), 2015
DOI: 10.1002/2015gl066570
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Infrasound recorded in the middle stratosphere suggests that the acoustic wave field above the Earth's surface differs dramatically from the wave field near the ground. In contrast to nearby surface stations, the balloon-borne infrasound array detected signals from turbulence, nonlinear ocean wave interactions, building ventilation systems, and other sources that have not been identified yet. Infrasound power spectra also bore little resemblance to spectra recorded on the ground at the same time. Thus, sensors on the Earth's surface likely capture a fraction of the true diversity of acoustic waves in the atmosphere. Future studies building upon this experiment may quantify the acoustic energy flux from the surface to the upper atmosphere, extend the capability of the International Monitoring System to detect nuclear explosions, and lay the observational groundwork for a recently-proposed mission to detect earthquakes on Venus using free-flying microphones.