Author:
Barnes Michael A.,Ndarana Thando,Sprenger Michael,Landman Willem A.
Abstract
Abstract. Stratospheric intrusions of high potential vorticity (PV)
air are well-known drivers of cyclonic development throughout the
troposphere. PV anomalies have been well studied with respect to their
effect on surface cyclogenesis. A gap however exists in the scientific
literature describing the effect that stratospheric intrusion depth has on
surface cyclogenetic forcing. Numerical experiments using PV inversion
diagnostics reveal that stratospheric depth is crucial in the intensity of
cyclonic circulation induced at the surface. In an idealized setting,
shallow, high-PV intrusions (above 300 hPa) resulted in a marginal effect on the surface, whilst growing stratospheric depth resulted in enhanced surface
pressure anomalies and surface cyclonic circulation. It is shown that the
height above the surface that intrusions reach is more critical than the
vertical size of the intrusion when inducing cyclonic flow at the surface.
This factor is however constrained by the height of the dynamical tropopause above the surface. The width of the stratospheric intrusion is an additional factor, with broader intrusions resulting in enhanced surface cyclogenetic forcing.
Cited by
4 articles.
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