Nonlinear Baroclinic Dynamics of Surface Cyclones Crossing a Zonal Jet

Author:

Gilet Jean-Baptiste1,Plu Matthieu2,Rivière Gwendal1

Affiliation:

1. GAME/CNRM, Météo-France, CNRS, Toulouse, France

2. GAME/CNRM, Météo-France, CNRS, Toulouse, and LACY, Unité Mixte CNRS–Météo-France–Université de La Réunion, Saint-Denis de la Réunion, France

Abstract

Abstract Mechanisms leading a synoptic surface cyclone to cross an upper-level zonal jet and its subsequent deepening are investigated using a two-layer model on a β plane. The baroclinic interaction of a low-level circular cyclonic perturbation with an upper-level one is first studied in vertical and horizontal cyclonic or anticyclonic uniform shears. A first nonlinear effect acting on the shape and energetics of the perturbations is analyzed. If the background shear is anticyclonic, the perturbations are stretched horizontally; they lose energy barotropically but gain it baroclinically by a well-maintained westward tilt with height. Conversely, if the shear is cyclonic, perturbations remain quite isotropic, but they do not keep a favorable vertical tilt with time and the baroclinic interaction is thus only transient. The latitudinal motion of the perturbations also results from a nonlinear effect. It is found to depend strongly on the background potential vorticity (PV) gradient. This effect is a baroclinic equivalent of the so-called nonlinear barotropic “β drift” and combines the nonlinear advection and vertical stretching terms. These results are confirmed when the anomalies are initially located south of a confined westerly jet. The poleward shift of the lower cyclonic anomaly occurs faster when the vertically averaged PV gradient is strongly positive, which happens when the jet has a large barotropic component. The lower anomaly crosses the jet from the warm to the cold side and deepens afterward. After a detailed description of this regeneration process with the help of an energy budget, it is shown that linear dynamics are not able to reproduce such behavior.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference32 articles.

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