scholarly journals Some Properties of Planetary Rossby Waves and the Associated Zonal Flow Acceleration in Horizontal and Vertical Shear on a β-Plane

1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 277-290
Author(s):  
Hisanori Itoh
1989 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 547-557
Author(s):  
Palani G. Kandaswamy ◽  
B. Tamil Selvi ◽  
Lokenath Debnath

A study is made of the propagation of Rossby waves in a stably stratified shear flows. The wave equation for the Rossby waves is derived in an isothermal atmosphere on a beta plane in the presence of a latitudinally sheared zonal flow. It is shown that the wave equation is singular at five critical levels, but the wave absorption takes place only at the two levels where the local relative frequency equals in magnitude to the Brunt Vaisala frequency. This analysis also reveals that these two levels exhibit valve effect by allowing the waves to penetrate them from one side only. The absorption coefficient exp(2πμ)is determined at these levels. Both the group velocity approach and single wave treatment are employed for the investigation of the problem.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (10) ◽  
pp. 3627-3639 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. B. Rhines

Abstract This paper describes qualitative features of the generation of jetlike concentrated circulations, wakes, and blocks by simple mountainlike orography, both from idealized laboratory experiments and shallow-water numerical simulations on a sphere. The experiments are unstratified with barotropic lee Rossby waves, and jets induced by mountain orography. A persistent pattern of lee jet formation and lee cyclogenesis owes its origins to arrested topographic Rossby waves above the mountain and potential vorticity (PV) advection through them. The wake jet occurs on the equatorward, eastern flank of the topography. A strong upstream blocking of the westerly flow occurs in a Lighthill mode of long Rossby wave propagation, which depends on βa2/U, the ratio of Rossby wave speed based on the scale of the mountain, to zonal advection speed, U (β is the meridional potential vorticity gradient, f is the Coriolis frequency, and a is the diameter of the mountain). Mountains wider (north–south) than the east–west length scale of stationary Rossby waves will tend to block the oncoming westerly flow. These blocks are essentially β plumes, which are illustrated by their linear Green function. For large βa2/U, upwind blocking is strong; the mountain wake can be unstable, filling the fluid with transient Rossby waves as in the numerical simulations of Polvani et al. For small values, βa2/U ≪ 1 classic lee Rossby waves with large wavelength compared to the mountain diameter are the dominant process. The mountain height, δh, relative to the mean fluid depth, H, affects these transitions as well. Simple lee Rossby waves occur only for such small heights, δh/h ≪ aβ/f, that the f/h contours are not greatly distorted by the mountain. Nongeostrophic dynamics are seen in inertial waves generated by geostrophic shear, and ducted by it, and also in a texture of finescale, inadvertent convection. Weakly damped circulations induced in a shallow-water numerical model on a sphere by a lone mountain in an initially simple westerly wind are also described. Here, with βa2/U ∼1, potential vorticity stirring and transient Rossby waves dominate, and drive zonal flow acceleration. Low-latitude critical layers, when present, exert strong control on the high-latitude waves, and with no restorative damping of the mean zonal flow, they migrate poleward toward the source of waves. While these experiments with homogeneous fluid are very simplified, the baroclinic atmosphere and ocean have many tall or equivalent barotropic eddy structures owing to the barotropization process of geostrophic turbulence.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgi Sutyrin ◽  
Jonas Nycander ◽  
Timour Radko

<p>Baroclinic vortices embedded in a large-scale vertical shear are examined. We describe a new class of steady propagating vortices that radiate Rossby waves but yet do not decay. This is possible since they can extract available potential energy (APE) from a large-scale vertically sheared flow, even though this flow is linearly stable. The vortices generate Rossby waves which induce a meridional vortex drift and an associated heat flux explained by an analysis of pseudomomentum and pseudoenergy. An analytical steady solution is considered for a marginally stable flow in a two-layer model on the beta-plane, where the beta-effect is compensated by the potential vorticity gradient (PVG) associated with the meridional slope of the density interface. The compensation occurs in the upper layer for an upper layer westward flow (an easterly shear) and in the lower layer for an upper layer eastward flow (the westerly shear). The theory is confirmed by numerical simulations indicating that for westward flows in subtropical oceans, the reduced PVG in the upper layer provides favorable conditions for eddy persistence and long-range propagation. The drifting and radiating vortex is an alternative mechanism besides baroclinic instability for converting background APE to mesoscale energy. </p>


Author(s):  
Vladimir Zeitlin

After analysis of general properties of horizontal motion in primitive equations and introduction of principal parameters, the key notion of geostrophic equilibrium is introduced. Quasi-geostrophic reductions of one- and two-layer rotating shallow-water models are obtained by a direct filtering of fast inertia–gravity waves through a choice of the time scale of motions of interest, and by asymptotic expansions in Rossby number. Properties of quasi-geostrophic models are established. It is shown that in the beta-plane approximations the models describe Rossby waves. The first idea of the classical baroclinic instability is given, and its relation to Rossby waves is explained. Modifications of quasi-geostrophic dynamics in the presence of coastal, topographic, and equatorial wave-guides are analysed. Emission of mountain Rossby waves by a flow over topography is demonstrated. The phenomena of Kelvin wave breaking, and of soliton formation by long equatorial and topographic Rossby waves due to nonlinear effects are explained.


2008 ◽  
Vol 602 ◽  
pp. 303-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. PLAUT ◽  
Y. LEBRANCHU ◽  
R. SIMITEV ◽  
F. H. BUSSE

A general reformulation of the Reynolds stresses created by two-dimensional waves breaking a translational or a rotational invariance is described. This reformulation emphasizes the importance of a geometrical factor: the slope of the separatrices of the wave flow. Its physical relevance is illustrated by two model systems: waves destabilizing open shear flows; and thermal Rossby waves in spherical shell convection with rotation. In the case of shear-flow waves, a new expression of the Reynolds–Orr amplification mechanism is obtained, and a good understanding of the form of the mean pressure and velocity fields created by weakly nonlinear waves is gained. In the case of thermal Rossby waves, results of a three-dimensional code using no-slip boundary conditions are presented in the nonlinear regime, and compared with those of a two-dimensional quasi-geostrophic model. A semi-quantitative agreement is obtained on the flow amplitudes, but discrepancies are observed concerning the nonlinear frequency shifts. With the quasi-geostrophic model we also revisit a geometrical formula proposed by Zhang to interpret the form of the zonal flow created by the waves, and explore the very low Ekman-number regime. A change in the nature of the wave bifurcation, from supercritical to subcritical, is found.


2009 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 1735-1748 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. T. M. Verkley

Abstract A global version of the equivalent barotropic vorticity equation is derived for the one-layer shallow-water equations on a sphere. The equation has the same form as the corresponding beta plane version, but with one important difference: the stretching (Cressman) term in the expression of the potential vorticity retains its full dependence on f 2, where f is the Coriolis parameter. As a check of the resulting system, the dynamics of linear Rossby waves are considered. It is shown that these waves are rather accurate approximations of the westward-propagating waves of the second class of the original shallow-water equations. It is also concluded that for Rossby waves with short meridional wavelengths the factor f 2 in the stretching term can be replaced by the constant value f02, where f0 is the Coriolis parameter at ±45° latitude.


Dr Swallow’s observations of the vertical profile of currents show how different a view of the deep ocean is now emerging. The tendency of currents to increase with depth below the permanent thermocline is so striking that it seems timely to point out that just this possibility was suggested recently by linearized theory (Rhines 1970). The work showed how short, yet quasi geostrophic, Rossby-topographic waves have a dominant mode that ceases to be independent of depth, and instead has faster currents near the bottom, due to the combined action of rotation, stratification and bottom slopes. This comment is not the first (nor probably the last) application of linear theory to such observations, for both Longuet-Higgins (1965) and Phillips (1966) have suggested their interpretation as Rossby waves of a constant-depth ocean model. Noting this vertical shear, Phillips was forced to invoke a mixture of the familiar baroclinic and barotropic modes. There are, however, objections to this, since those baroclinic modes are exceedingly slowly propagating, and cannot be expected to persist with such strong currents. Also, as Dr Swallow points out, the current directions do not vary greatly in the vertical, suggesting an explanation as a single mode rather than a mixture. The bottom slopes, however, can greatly alter both horizontal propagation and vertical stucture. In particular the presence of vertical shear no longer implies impossibly small frequencies.


2010 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Marié

Abstract. The problem of the linear instability of quasi-geostrophic Rossby waves to zonal flow perturbations is investigated on an infinite β-plane using a phase dynamics formalism. Equations governing the coupled evolutions of a zonal velocity perturbation and phase and amplitude perturbations of a finite-amplitude wave are obtained. The analysis is valid in the limit of infinitesimal, zonally invariant perturbation components, varying slowly in the meridional direction and with respect to time. In the case of a slow sinusoidal meridional variation of the perturbation components, analytical expressions for the perturbation growth rates are obtained, which are checked against numerical codes based on standard Floquet theory.


2007 ◽  
Vol 369 (3) ◽  
pp. 218-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.B. Mikhailovskii ◽  
J.G. Lominadze ◽  
N.N. Erokhin ◽  
N.S. Erokhin ◽  
A.I. Smolyakov ◽  
...  

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