Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic

As an elaboration of recent studies by BUELL (1954, 1957) and JENKINSON (1956), the relation between the standard deviation of contour height and the vector standard deviation of geostrophic wind velocity is formulated, both for point values (variations in time) and for chart values (variations in s...

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Published in:Tellus
Main Authors: Godson, Warren L., MacFarlane, M. Aylmer
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Stockholm University Press 1960
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/tellusa.v12i3.9404
https://account.a.tellusjournals.se/index.php/su-j-tadmo/article/download/3467/6603
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spelling crstockholmup:10.3402/tellusa.v12i3.9404 2024-06-02T08:01:42+00:00 Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic Godson, Warren L. MacFarlane, M. Aylmer 1960 http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/tellusa.v12i3.9404 https://account.a.tellusjournals.se/index.php/su-j-tadmo/article/download/3467/6603 unknown Stockholm University Press https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 Tellus A: Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography volume 12, issue 3, page 259-265 ISSN 1600-0870 journal-article 1960 crstockholmup https://doi.org/10.3402/tellusa.v12i3.9404 2024-05-07T14:17:31Z As an elaboration of recent studies by BUELL (1954, 1957) and JENKINSON (1956), the relation between the standard deviation of contour height and the vector standard deviation of geostrophic wind velocity is formulated, both for point values (variations in time) and for chart values (variations in space). The relation between wind and contour variances for a simple schematic contour pattern is examined, from the point of view of both space and time statistics. The relationship between the space variance of contour height (S2) and the space variance of the geostrophic wind (σ2) was evaluated over the Arctic (north of about 60° N) at the 500-mb level. A high degree of correlation was found to exist between these two quantities, although the form of the relationship (σ2 proportional to S) did not agree with the results of previous studies (BUELL, JENKINSON, loc.cit.) of time variances. However, a reanalysis of such data for northern latitudes yielded results virtually identical with those of the present study. In both cases, the standard error of estimate was too large to enable one to calculate accurately the wind variance from the height variance for synoptic purposes, but the relationships do allow climatological estimates (seasonal, etc.) to be made of the mean kinetic energy and of the size and amplitude of the dominant wave systems. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Stockholm University Press Arctic Tellus 12 3 259 265
institution Open Polar
collection Stockholm University Press
op_collection_id crstockholmup
language unknown
description As an elaboration of recent studies by BUELL (1954, 1957) and JENKINSON (1956), the relation between the standard deviation of contour height and the vector standard deviation of geostrophic wind velocity is formulated, both for point values (variations in time) and for chart values (variations in space). The relation between wind and contour variances for a simple schematic contour pattern is examined, from the point of view of both space and time statistics. The relationship between the space variance of contour height (S2) and the space variance of the geostrophic wind (σ2) was evaluated over the Arctic (north of about 60° N) at the 500-mb level. A high degree of correlation was found to exist between these two quantities, although the form of the relationship (σ2 proportional to S) did not agree with the results of previous studies (BUELL, JENKINSON, loc.cit.) of time variances. However, a reanalysis of such data for northern latitudes yielded results virtually identical with those of the present study. In both cases, the standard error of estimate was too large to enable one to calculate accurately the wind variance from the height variance for synoptic purposes, but the relationships do allow climatological estimates (seasonal, etc.) to be made of the mean kinetic energy and of the size and amplitude of the dominant wave systems.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Godson, Warren L.
MacFarlane, M. Aylmer
spellingShingle Godson, Warren L.
MacFarlane, M. Aylmer
Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic
author_facet Godson, Warren L.
MacFarlane, M. Aylmer
author_sort Godson, Warren L.
title Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic
title_short Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic
title_full Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic
title_fullStr Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Tropospheric Geopotential and Velocity Variances over the Arctic
title_sort tropospheric geopotential and velocity variances over the arctic
publisher Stockholm University Press
publishDate 1960
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/tellusa.v12i3.9404
https://account.a.tellusjournals.se/index.php/su-j-tadmo/article/download/3467/6603
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Tellus A: Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
volume 12, issue 3, page 259-265
ISSN 1600-0870
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3402/tellusa.v12i3.9404
container_title Tellus
container_volume 12
container_issue 3
container_start_page 259
op_container_end_page 265
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