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551 Tropical

Explore the reasons for greater subsidence on the eastern side of tropical oceans, the characteristics of the trade wind or sub-tropical inversion, and the use of streamline/isotach analysis in tropical meteorology.

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551 Tropical

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  1. 551 Tropical Advanced Topics

  2. Trade Wind Inversion

  3. One starts with subsidence in the subtropics

  4. But the subsidence is not zonally uniform: greater in the eastern side of the oceans

  5. The resulting greater subsidence on the eastern sides depressing heights on the eastern sides of the ocean relative to the central portions

  6. But why more subsidence on the eastern side? • Asymmetry of meridional motions • Northerly on western side • Southerly on eastern side • Thus, air parcels are experiencing progressively smaller f on the eastern side. • If relative vorticity is maintained, need differential subsidence to balance.

  7. Trade Wind or Subtropical Inversion • The height of the base of this inversion varies from about 500 m at the eastern extremities of the subtropical highs to about 2000 m at the western and equatorial extremities. • In the equatorial trough zone and over the western portions of the trade-wind belt, the inversion does not exist as a mean condition, although it appears in certain weather patterns. • The inversion is generally strongest when the height of its base is lowest, and vice versa. The thickness of the inversion layer varies from tens of m to more than 1000 m. • On the average its thickness is about 400 m.

  8. Tropical Analyses • See both midlatitude style, isobaric analysis, and streamline/isotach analyses. • Why the latter is most popular?

  9. Why streamline/isotachs better than isobars/heights in the tropics? • Flow not geostrophic within roughly 5 degrees of the equator (so connection between pressure and winds are not necessarily straightforward) • Lot of pibals (just winds) in the tropics compared to radiosondes. • Pressure variations normally weak in the equator (large noise to signal)

  10. Thus, why not analyze winds instead of pressure?

  11. Streamline/isotach analysis is used but there are alternatives (isogon, isotach) Not intuitive

  12. Tips on streamline/isotach analysis (you will do this) • Do streamlines first if possible. • You will see a lot of familiar patterns (circulation, deformation, convergence, etc.) • Winds should go to zero at singular points: such as centers of rotation, convergence/divergence, and deformation.

  13. Easterly Waves: The Major Synoptic Disturbances in the Tropics • Westward moving synoptic waves characterize the whole tropics • They are tropospheric waves that modulate clouds/rainfall and move at about 5-10 m/s and have wavelengths of 2000-4000 km. • Assignment: METED African Easterly Wave module

  14. Composite African Wave Structures (Reed et al., 1977)

  15. African Easterly Waves Are Closely Associated with and Propagate in a Midtropospheric Easterly Jet • Centered around 650-700 hPa near 15N • Associated with large temperature difference between the hot Sahara and cool Gulf of Guinea

  16. The Mean State over West Africa: The African Easterly Jet (AEJ) Burpee, R.W. 1972 The origin and structure of easterly waves in the lower troposphere of North Africa, J. Atmos. Sci. 29, 77-90 Why is the AEJ there?

  17. Hint: Surface temps • Strong baroclinic zone 10o-20oN

  18. Reed, R.J., Norquist, D.C. and Recker, E.E., The structure and properties of African wave disturbances as observed during Phase III of GATE, Mon. Wea. Rev. 105, 317-333 (1977).

  19. Zonal Variations in the Mean State Mean 700hPa U wind, 16th July – 15th August 2000 Berry and Thorncroft 2005

  20. Observations of African Easterly Waves Carlson 1969ab Carried out case studies of several AEWs Peak amplitudes at 600-700mb and at surface Eastward tilt with height from the surface to the level of the AEJ Synoptic variations in cloud cover Peak of cloudiness close to AEW trough

  21. Observations of African Easterly Waves Burpee (1970) Eastward tilt beneath the AEJ – Westward tilt above the AEJ Northerlies dry and warm Southerlies wet and cold

  22. Observations of African Easterly Waves Reed et al, 1977 Composite AEW structures from phase III of GATE (after Reed et al, 1977). (a) and (b) are relative vorticity at the surface and 700hPa respectively with a contour interval of 10-5s-1. (c) and (d) show percentage cover by convective cloud and average precipitation rate (mm day-1) respectively. Category 4 is location of 700hPa trough and the “0” latitude is 11oN over land and 12oN over ocean.

  23. Origin of African Easterly Waves • A joint baratropic/baroclinic instability on the African easterly jet.

  24. Thorncroft and Hodges 2001

  25. 4.3 Observations of African Easterly Waves Carlson, T.N., 1969a: Synoptic histories of three African disturbances that developed into Atlantic hurricanes. Mon. Wea. Rev., 97, 256-276. Carlson, T.N., 1969b: Some remarks on African disturbances and their progress over the tropical Atlantic. Mon. Wea. Rev., 97, 716-726. Burpee, R.W., 1970: The origin and structure of easterly waves in the lower troposphere of North Africa, J. Atmos. Sci. 29, 77-90. Reed, R.J., Norquist, D.C. and Recker, E.E., 1977: The structure and properties of African wave disturbances as observed during Phase III of GATE, Mon. Wea. Rev. 105, 317-333 Thorncroft, C.D. and Hodges: 2001 K.I., African easterly wave variability and its relationship to tropical cyclone activity, J. Clim.14, 1166-1179 (2001). Kiladis, G., C. Thorncroft, and N. Hall, 2006: Three-Dimensional Structure and Dynamics of African easterly waves: part I: Observations, J. Atmos. Sci., 63, 2212-2230. Mekonnen, A., C. Thorncroft, and A. Aiyyer, 2006: On the significance of African easterly waves on convection, J. Climate, 19, 5405-5421. Berry, G., Thorncroft, C.D. and Hewson, T. 2006 African easterly waves in 2004 – Analysis using objective techniques Mon. Wea. Rev., 133, 752-766

  26. The End

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