4.4 Article

Kinematics of Eddy-Mean Flow Interaction in an Idealized Atmospheric Model

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Volume 70, Issue 8, Pages 2574-2595

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JAS-D-12-0309.1

Keywords

Atmospheric circulation; Dynamics; Extratropical cyclones

Funding

  1. UWM through the sabbatical enhancement award
  2. NSF grant [ATM-0852459]
  3. Russian Ministry of Education and Science [02.445.11.7442]
  4. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences
  5. Directorate For Geosciences [0852459] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The authors analyze atmospheric variability simulated in a two-layer baroclinic -channel quasigeostrophic model by combining Eulerian and feature-tracking analysis approaches. The leading mode of the model's low-frequency variability (LFV) is associated with the irregular shifts of the zonal-mean jet to the north and south of its climatological position accompanied by simultaneous intensification of the jet, while the deviations from the zonal-mean fields are dominated by propagating anomalies with wavenumbers 3-5. The model's variability is shown to stem from the life cycles of cyclones and anticyclones. In particular, synthetic streamfunction fields constructed by launching idealized composite-mean eddies along the actual full-model-simulated cyclone/anticyclone tracks reproduce nearly perfectly not only the dominant propagating waves, but also the jet-shifting LFV. The composite eddy tracks conditioned on the phase of the jet-shifting variability migrate north or south along with the zonal-mean jet. The synoptic-eddy life cycles in the states with poleward (equatorward) zonal-jet shift exhibit longer-than-climatological lifetimes; this is caused, arguably, by a barotropic feedback associated with preferred anticyclonic (cyclonic) wave breaking in these respective states. Lagged correlation and cross-spectrum analyses of zonal-mean jet position time series and the time series representing mean latitudinal location of the eddies at a given time demonstrate that jet latitude leads the storm-track latitude at low frequencies. This indicates that the LFV associated with the jet-shifting mode here is more dynamically involved than being a mere consequence of the random variations in the distribution of the synoptic systems.

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