TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of perturbations within growing baroclinic waves
AU - Snyder, C.
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - We explore the linear stability of a growing, three-dimensional baroclinic wave by calculating the perturbation that grows most rapidly over various time intervals and at various stages in the development of the parent wave and its fronts. Three norms are used to measure growth: volume-integrated energy, enstrophy and stream function variance. The flow is assumed adiabatic and quasi-geostrophic for simplicity, and perturbations are required to have uniform potential vorticity. These rapidly growing perturbations can produce realistic sub-structures within the parent wave, such as upper-level vorticity maxima that propagate relative to a synoptic-scale parent wave or packets of synoptic-scale waves within a planetary-wave basic state. For a synoptic-scale parent wave and the energy or enstrophy norms, however, the dominant characteristics of the fastest growing perturbations is that they rapidly evolve toward a final structure corresponding to a phase shift and slight change of shape of the original wave-in essence, the initial perturbation modifies the parent wave and the jet on which it propages, which results in a modification, which grows in time, of the phase and amplitude of the parent wave. Amplifications in energy or enstrophy are also small compared to what would be estimated based on the locally large shears and baroclinicity within the parent wave. The fronts appear to be stabilized by the combined influences of synoptic-scale horizontal deformation and the natural movement of perturbation relative to the parent wave.
AB - We explore the linear stability of a growing, three-dimensional baroclinic wave by calculating the perturbation that grows most rapidly over various time intervals and at various stages in the development of the parent wave and its fronts. Three norms are used to measure growth: volume-integrated energy, enstrophy and stream function variance. The flow is assumed adiabatic and quasi-geostrophic for simplicity, and perturbations are required to have uniform potential vorticity. These rapidly growing perturbations can produce realistic sub-structures within the parent wave, such as upper-level vorticity maxima that propagate relative to a synoptic-scale parent wave or packets of synoptic-scale waves within a planetary-wave basic state. For a synoptic-scale parent wave and the energy or enstrophy norms, however, the dominant characteristics of the fastest growing perturbations is that they rapidly evolve toward a final structure corresponding to a phase shift and slight change of shape of the original wave-in essence, the initial perturbation modifies the parent wave and the jet on which it propages, which results in a modification, which grows in time, of the phase and amplitude of the parent wave. Amplifications in energy or enstrophy are also small compared to what would be estimated based on the locally large shears and baroclinicity within the parent wave. The fronts appear to be stabilized by the combined influences of synoptic-scale horizontal deformation and the natural movement of perturbation relative to the parent wave.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0032415673
U2 - 10.1256/smsqj.55008
DO - 10.1256/smsqj.55008
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0032415673
SN - 0035-9009
VL - 124
SP - 1961
EP - 1983
JO - Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
JF - Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
IS - 550
ER -