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Scale analysis of moist thermodynamics in a simple model and the relationship between moisture modes and gravity waves

Cited 38 time in Web of Science Cited 38 time in Scopus
Authors

Adames, Ángel F.; Kim, Daehyun; Clark, Spencer K.; Ming, Yi; Inoue, Kuniaki

Issue Date
2019-12
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Citation
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, Vol.76 No.12, pp.3863-3881
Abstract
Observations and theory of convectively coupled equatorial waves suggest that they can be categorized into two distinct groups. Moisture modes are waves whose thermodynamics are governed by moisture fluctuations. The thermodynamics of the gravity wave group, on the other hand, are rooted in buoyancy (temperature) fluctuations. On the basis of scale analysis, it is found that a simple nondimensional parameter-akin to the Rossby number-can explain the processes that lead to the existence of these two groups. This parameter, defined as Nmode, indicates that moisture modes arise when anomalous convection lasts sufficiently long so that dry gravity waves eliminate the temperature anomalies in the convective region, satisfying weak temperature gradient (WTG) balance. This process causes moisture anomalies to dominate the distribution of moist enthalpy (or moist static energy), and hence the evolution of the wave. Conversely, convectively coupled gravity waves arise when anomalous convection eliminates the moisture anomalies more rapidly than dry gravity waves can adjust the troposphere toward WTG balance, causing temperature to govern the moist enthalpy distribution and evolution. Spectral analysis of reanalysis data indicates that slowly propagating waves (cp ~ 3 m s-1) are likely to be moisture modes while fast waves (cp~30ms-1) exhibit gravitywave behavior,with "mixedmoisture-gravity" waves existing in between.While these findings are obtained from a highly idealized framework, it is hypothesized that they can be extended to understand simulations of convectively coupled waves in GCMs and the thermodynamics of more complex phenomena.
ISSN
0022-4928
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/200966
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-19-0121.1
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
Research Area Climate Change, Earth & Environmental Data, Severe Weather, 기후과학, 위험기상, 지구환경 데이터과학

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