Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows

The linear baroclinic instability of three-dimensional basic flows on the Northern Hemisphere is examined in terms of a simple two-level, quasi-geostrophic model. The basic flows considered comprise an observed six-winter mean flow, as well as anomalous flows which represent episodes where large-sca...

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Main Authors: Robertson, Andrew W., Metz, Werner
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Meteorological Society 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S18C6S
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spelling ftcolumbiauniv:oai:academiccommons.columbia.edu:10.7916/D8S18C6S 2023-05-15T17:36:45+02:00 Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows Robertson, Andrew W. Metz, Werner 1989 https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S18C6S English eng American Meteorological Society https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S18C6S Atmosphere Meteorology Articles 1989 ftcolumbiauniv https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S18C6S 2019-04-04T08:08:14Z The linear baroclinic instability of three-dimensional basic flows on the Northern Hemisphere is examined in terms of a simple two-level, quasi-geostrophic model. The basic flows considered comprise an observed six-winter mean flow, as well as anomalous flows which represent episodes where large-scale persistent flow anomalies, such as the Pacific/North American (PNA), East Atlantic (EA), or North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) patterns exhibit large amplitudes. For the climatological basic state, the fastest-growing normal modes with periods of around 4 days consist of regionally confined, synoptic-scale, baroclinic wave trains. These are considered as cyclogenesis modes, characterizing the linear synoptic-scale eddy activity associated with a given basic flow. This eddy activity has a pronounced maximum over the Pacific, close to the position of the observed Pacific storm track, but the second maximum over the Atlantic, corresponding to the Atlantic storm track, is considerably underestimated. Nevertheless, comparing the structure of the cyclogenesis modes with that of the leading complex EOFs of the observed bandpass-filtered flow, a pattern correlation squared of up to 0.4 is obtained. Truncating the basic state to comprise only the ultralong waves (zonal wavenumber m ≤ 4) results in rather little change in the cyclogenesis modes obtained. Finally, the sensitivity of the cyclogenesis modes to the anomalous basic flows is investigated, using persistent anomaly patterns (PNA, EA, NAO) obtained from a rotated principal component analysis of the observed lowpass-filtered flow. The anomalous basic states are evaluated by adding or subtracting these patterns to/from the winter climatological mean flow. It turns out that the normal-mode wave trains are significantly deflected from their climatological positions, particularly in the EA and NAO cases. This model response is verified against composite maps of observed bandpass variance, obtained for episodes of strong PNA, EA or NAO anomalies respectively. It is found that, although the normal-mode wave trains are still relatively too weak over the Atlantic (compared to the Pacific), the structural differences in the observed bandpass eddy activity between positive and negative anomaly cases are captured quite well by the normal modes. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Columbia University: Academic Commons Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Columbia University: Academic Commons
op_collection_id ftcolumbiauniv
language English
topic Atmosphere
Meteorology
spellingShingle Atmosphere
Meteorology
Robertson, Andrew W.
Metz, Werner
Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows
topic_facet Atmosphere
Meteorology
description The linear baroclinic instability of three-dimensional basic flows on the Northern Hemisphere is examined in terms of a simple two-level, quasi-geostrophic model. The basic flows considered comprise an observed six-winter mean flow, as well as anomalous flows which represent episodes where large-scale persistent flow anomalies, such as the Pacific/North American (PNA), East Atlantic (EA), or North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) patterns exhibit large amplitudes. For the climatological basic state, the fastest-growing normal modes with periods of around 4 days consist of regionally confined, synoptic-scale, baroclinic wave trains. These are considered as cyclogenesis modes, characterizing the linear synoptic-scale eddy activity associated with a given basic flow. This eddy activity has a pronounced maximum over the Pacific, close to the position of the observed Pacific storm track, but the second maximum over the Atlantic, corresponding to the Atlantic storm track, is considerably underestimated. Nevertheless, comparing the structure of the cyclogenesis modes with that of the leading complex EOFs of the observed bandpass-filtered flow, a pattern correlation squared of up to 0.4 is obtained. Truncating the basic state to comprise only the ultralong waves (zonal wavenumber m ≤ 4) results in rather little change in the cyclogenesis modes obtained. Finally, the sensitivity of the cyclogenesis modes to the anomalous basic flows is investigated, using persistent anomaly patterns (PNA, EA, NAO) obtained from a rotated principal component analysis of the observed lowpass-filtered flow. The anomalous basic states are evaluated by adding or subtracting these patterns to/from the winter climatological mean flow. It turns out that the normal-mode wave trains are significantly deflected from their climatological positions, particularly in the EA and NAO cases. This model response is verified against composite maps of observed bandpass variance, obtained for episodes of strong PNA, EA or NAO anomalies respectively. It is found that, although the normal-mode wave trains are still relatively too weak over the Atlantic (compared to the Pacific), the structural differences in the observed bandpass eddy activity between positive and negative anomaly cases are captured quite well by the normal modes.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Robertson, Andrew W.
Metz, Werner
author_facet Robertson, Andrew W.
Metz, Werner
author_sort Robertson, Andrew W.
title Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows
title_short Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows
title_full Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows
title_fullStr Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows
title_full_unstemmed Three-Dimensional Linear Instability of Persistent Anomalous Large-Scale Flows
title_sort three-dimensional linear instability of persistent anomalous large-scale flows
publisher American Meteorological Society
publishDate 1989
url https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S18C6S
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S18C6S
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S18C6S
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