TY - JOUR
T1 - Stratospheric wave-mean flow feedbacks and sudden stratospheric warmings in a simple model forced by upward wave activity flux
AU - Sjoberg, Jeremiah P.
AU - Birner, Thomas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - A classic result of studying stratospheric wave-mean flow interactions presented by Holton andMass is that, for constant incoming wave forcing (at a notional tropopause), a vacillating stratospheric response may ensue. Simple models, such as the Holton-Mass model, typically prescribe the incoming wave forcing in terms of geopotential perturbation, which is not a proxy for upward wave activity flux. Here, the authors reformulate the Holton-Mass model such that incoming upward wave activity flux is prescribed. The Holton-Mass model contains a positive wave-mean flow feedback whereby wave forcing decelerates the mean flow, allowing enhanced wave propagation, which then further decelerates the mean flow, etc., until the mean flow no longer supports wave propagation. By specifying incoming wave activity flux, this feedback is constrained to the model interior. Bistability-where the zonal wind may exist at one of two distinct steady states for a given incoming wave forcing-is maintained in this reformulated model. The model is perturbed with transient pulses of upward wave activity flux to produce transitions between the two stable states. A minimum of integrated incoming wave activity flux necessary to force these sudden stratospheric warming-like transitions exists for pulses with time scales on the order of 10 days, arising from a wave time scale internal to the model at which forcing produces the strongest mean-flow response. The authors examine how the tropopause affects the internal feedback for this model setup and find that the tropopause inversion layer may potentially provide an important source of wave activity in the lower stratosphere.
AB - A classic result of studying stratospheric wave-mean flow interactions presented by Holton andMass is that, for constant incoming wave forcing (at a notional tropopause), a vacillating stratospheric response may ensue. Simple models, such as the Holton-Mass model, typically prescribe the incoming wave forcing in terms of geopotential perturbation, which is not a proxy for upward wave activity flux. Here, the authors reformulate the Holton-Mass model such that incoming upward wave activity flux is prescribed. The Holton-Mass model contains a positive wave-mean flow feedback whereby wave forcing decelerates the mean flow, allowing enhanced wave propagation, which then further decelerates the mean flow, etc., until the mean flow no longer supports wave propagation. By specifying incoming wave activity flux, this feedback is constrained to the model interior. Bistability-where the zonal wind may exist at one of two distinct steady states for a given incoming wave forcing-is maintained in this reformulated model. The model is perturbed with transient pulses of upward wave activity flux to produce transitions between the two stable states. A minimum of integrated incoming wave activity flux necessary to force these sudden stratospheric warming-like transitions exists for pulses with time scales on the order of 10 days, arising from a wave time scale internal to the model at which forcing produces the strongest mean-flow response. The authors examine how the tropopause affects the internal feedback for this model setup and find that the tropopause inversion layer may potentially provide an important source of wave activity in the lower stratosphere.
KW - Nonlinear dynamics
KW - Quasigeostrophic models
KW - Stratosphere
KW - Waves
KW - atmospheric
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84910136829
U2 - 10.1175/JAS-D-14-0113.1
DO - 10.1175/JAS-D-14-0113.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84910136829
SN - 0022-4928
VL - 71
SP - 4055
EP - 4071
JO - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
JF - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
IS - 11
ER -