baroclinic adjustment
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2021 ◽  
pp. 22-46
Author(s):  
Pablo Zurita-Gotor ◽  
Richard S. Lindzen

2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 633-653
Author(s):  
Yang Yu ◽  
Shu-Hua Chen ◽  
Yu-Heng Tseng ◽  
Xinyu Guo ◽  
Jie Shi ◽  
...  

AbstractThe impacts of diurnal atmospheric forcing on the summer salinity change in the East China Sea are investigated using the Regional Ocean Modeling System, forced by the hourly and daily reanalysis of wind and insolation. The differences between the forcing of these two frequencies reveal a dipole pattern of salinity change with a positive salinity deviation (1–2 psu) offshore of the Yangtze River estuary, and a negative deviation (from −1 to −0.5 psu) along the Jiangsu Coast. Further dye tracking experiments confirm that diurnal forcing strengthened the northwestward longshore freshwater transport (NLFT) of the Yangtze River by 5.2 × 109 m3 and reduced the mean water age of 7 days. Sensitivity experiments using different forcing combinations suggest that the diurnal wind, that is, the land–sea breeze, is the key to developing the dipole pattern of salinity change and the NLFT. Through the experiment, the land–sea breeze induced a mean clockwise circulation offshore of the Yangtze River estuary. The above changes resulted from both the nonlinearity of wind stress averaging (i.e., the square nature of wind stress) and the baroclinic adjustment related to the diurnal salinity variation, which is directly connected to the diurnal swing of the Yangtze River front. The baroclinic adjustment generated a dipole pattern of vorticity changes offshore of the Yangtze River estuary and a coherent northwestward jet current strengthening the NLFT. These processes developed the summer dipole pattern of the salinity change.


2018 ◽  
Vol 123 (10) ◽  
pp. 7067-7083 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine Hutchinson ◽  
Lisa M. Beal ◽  
Pierrick Penven ◽  
Isabelle Ansorge ◽  
Juliet Hermes

2018 ◽  
Vol 75 (9) ◽  
pp. 2955-2970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lenka Novak ◽  
Maarten H. P. Ambaum ◽  
Ben J. Harvey

Abstract The steady-state response of a midlatitude storm track to large-scale extratropical thermal forcing and eddy friction is investigated in a dry general circulation model with a zonally symmetric forcing. A two-way equilibration is found between the relative responses of the mean baroclinicity and baroclinic eddy intensity, whereby mean baroclinicity responds more strongly to eddy friction whereas eddy intensity responds more strongly to the thermal forcing of baroclinicity. These seemingly counterintuitive responses are reconciled using the steady state of a predator–prey relationship between baroclinicity and eddy intensity. This relationship provides additional support for the well-studied mechanism of baroclinic adjustment in Earth’s atmosphere, as well as providing a new mechanism whereby eddy dissipation controls the large-scale thermal structure of a baroclinically unstable atmosphere. It is argued that these two mechanisms of baroclinic adjustment and dissipative control should be used in tandem when considering storm-track equilibration.


2012 ◽  
Vol 39 (19) ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Sally E. Close ◽  
Alberto C. Naveira Garabato

2012 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. T. Willcocks ◽  
J. G. Esler

Abstract Two theories for the nonlinear equilibration of baroclinic waves in a two-layer fluid in a β channel are tested by comparison with high-resolution numerical simulations. Predictions are tested for a range of parameters (β, κ), where the inverse criticality β measures the degree of instability and the quasigeostrophic Ekman number κ measures the strength of Ekman friction. The first theory, from Warn, Gauthier, and Pedlosky (WGP), is formally valid for marginally unstable waves at κ = 0. The second, from Romea, is formally valid for nonzero κ and for waves that are marginally stable with respect to a different criterion, which enters because of the dissipative destabilization of otherwise stable waves by Ekman friction. The predictions of the two theories are in conflict in the limit κ → 0. When κ is slightly greater than zero, it is found that the WGP accurately predicts the maximum wave amplitude attained during a baroclinic life cycle across a significant range of parameter space. By contrast, accurate predictions of the long-time asymptotic wave amplitude are obtained only from Romea’s theory, even for those cases where WGP describes the initial behavior during the life cycle accurately. The results first indicate the importance of understanding the nonlinear equilibration mechanism of dissipatively destabilized waves. Second, it follows that baroclinic adjustment theories formulated from inviscid and frictionless stability criterion make demonstrably incorrect predictions for the equilibrated state, even in the limit of vanishing Ekman friction.


2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (11) ◽  
pp. 2710-2730 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Peter H. Stone

Abstract Baroclinic eddy equilibration and the roles of different boundary layer processes in limiting the baroclinic adjustment are studied using an atmosphere–ocean thermally coupled model. Boundary layer processes not only affect the dynamical constraint of the midlatitude baroclinic eddy equilibration but also are important components in the underlying surface energy budget. The authors' study shows that baroclinic eddies, with the strong mixing of the surface air temperature, compete against the fast boundary layer thermal damping and enhance the meridional variation of surface sensible heat flux, acting to reduce the meridional gradient of the surface temperature. Nevertheless, the requirement of the surface energy balance indicates that strong surface baroclinicity is always maintained in response to the meridionally varying solar radiation. With the strong surface baroclinicity and the boundary layer processes, the homogenized potential vorticity (PV) suggested in the baroclinic adjustment are never observed near the surface or in the boundary layer. Although different boundary layer processes affect baroclinic eddy equilibration differently with more dynamical feedbacks and time scales included in the coupled system, their influence in limiting the PV homogenization is more uniform compared with the previous uncoupled runs. The boundary layer PV structure is more determined by the strength of the boundary layer damping than the surface baroclinicity. Stronger boundary layer processes always prevent the lower-level PV homogenization more efficiently. Above the boundary layer, a relatively robust PV structure with homogenized PV around 600–800 hPa is obtained in all of the simulations. The detailed mechanisms through which different boundary layer processes affect the equilibration of the coupled system are discussed in this study.


2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (8) ◽  
pp. 1851-1865 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francis J. Poulin ◽  
Glenn R. Flierl ◽  
Joseph Pedlosky

Abstract Motivated by the fact that time-dependent currents are ubiquitous in the ocean, this work studies the two-layer Phillips model on the beta plane with baroclinic shear flows that are steady, periodic, or aperiodic in time to understand their nonlinear evolution better. When a linearly unstable basic state is slightly perturbed, the primary wave grows exponentially until nonlinear advection adjusts the growth. Even though for long time scales these nearly two-dimensional motions predominantly cascade energy to large scales, for relatively short times the wave–mean flow and wave–wave interactions cascade energy to smaller horizontal length scales. The authors demonstrate that the manner through which these mechanisms excite the harmonics depends significantly on the characteristics of the basic state. Time-dependent basic states can excite harmonics very rapidly in comparison to steady basic states. Moreover, in all the simulations of aperiodic baroclinic shear flows, the barotropic component of the primary wave continues to grow after the adjustment by the nonlinearities. Furthermore, the authors find that the correction to the zonal mean flow can be much larger when the basic state is aperiodic compared to the periodic or steady limits. Finally, even though time-dependent baroclinic shear on an f plane is linearly stable, the authors show that perturbations can grow algebraically in the linear regime because of the erratic variations in the aperiodic flow. Subsequently, baroclinicity adjusts the growing wave and creates a final state that is more energetic than the nonlinear adjustment of any of the unstable steady baroclinic shears that are considered.


2010 ◽  
Vol 67 (8) ◽  
pp. 2632-2648 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Peter H. Stone

Abstract Baroclinic eddy equilibration under a Northern Hemisphere–like seasonal forcing is studied using a modified multilayer quasigeostrophic channel model to investigate the widely used “quick baroclinic eddy equilibration” assumption and to understand to what extent baroclinic adjustment can be applied to interpret the midlatitude climate. Under a slowly varying seasonal forcing, the eddy and mean flow seasonal behavior is characterized by four clearly divided time intervals: an eddy inactive time interval in summer, a mainly dynamically determined eddy spinup time interval starting in midfall and lasting less than one month, and a quasi-equilibrium time interval for the zonal mean flow available potential energy from late fall to late spring, with a mainly external forcing determined spindown time interval for eddy activity from late winter to late spring. The baroclinic adjustment can be clearly observed from late fall to late spring. The sensitivity study of the eddy equilibration to the time scale of the external forcing indicates that the time scale separation between the baroclinic adjustment and the external forcing in midlatitudes is only visible for external forcing cycles one year and longer. In spite of the strong seasonality of the eddy activity, similar to the observations, a robust potential vorticity (PV) structure is still observed through all the seasons. However, it is found that baroclinic eddy is not the only candidate mechanism to maintain the robust PV structure. The role of the boundary layer thermal forcing and the moist convection in maintaining the lower-level PV structure is discussed. The adjustment and the vertical variation of the lower-level stratification play an important role in all of these mechanisms.


2008 ◽  
pp. 22-46
Author(s):  
Pablo Zurita-Gotor ◽  
Richard S. Lindzen

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