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Diapositiva 1

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CLIVAR SPAIN 2/12/08 Figures from http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/NAO by Martin Visbeck Outline of the talk Zonal index , persistence and eddy-zonal mean feedback. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diapositiva 1


1
Dynamics of extratropical jet shift
Pablo Zurita Gotor Depto. FĂ­sica de la Tierra
I Universidad Complutense
CLIVAR SPAIN 2/12/08
2
Outline of the talk
  1. Zonal index , persistence and eddy-zonal mean
    feedback.
  2. Diagnostics of jet position the jet symmetry
    budget.
  3. Eddy-driven shift in the two-layer QG model.

3
Internal variability of the jet the zonal index
  • Leading mode of variability of zonal-mean zonal
    wind
  • Represents a meridional shift of the jet
  • Has equivalent barotropic structure

4
Zonal index and annular modes
The zonal index variability is intimately related
to the annular mode variability
Geostrophic zonal wind
Geopotential height
5
Forced annular response
The annular mode response is ubiquitous for many
types of climate perturbations
Projected 21st century stormtrack shift in IPCC
AR4 models (Yin 2005)
Southern Hemisphere geopotential trend, partly
attributed to ozone changes (Thompson and Solomon
2002)
In many circumstances, the annular pattern
dominates the forced response even when the
external forcing has little projection on this
pattern.
6
Zonal index persistence
  • The zonal index is much more persistent than the
    eddies that drive it
  • At long time scales, there might be a role for
    the stratosphere and/or ocean
  • At subsynoptic time scales, eddy-zonal mean
    feedback is likely more important
  • The eddy forcing is such that it tends to
    reinforce preexisting zonal wind anomalies

7
Why is persistence important?
The short answer is predictability There seems
to exist a relation between the persistence of
the mode and the percentage of variance that it
explains (e.g., Yang and Chang 2007)
Likewise, models with more persistent internal
variability show stronger annular trends
8
Diagnostics of jet position
Start with zonal-mean zonal momentum equation
This is just a balance between the different
accelerations. However, this tells us nothing
about the position of the jet!
9
Diagnostics of jet position
Start with zonal-mean zonal momentum equation
Multiply by latitude
Integrating in y and z
We refer to this equation as the jet symmetry
budget
10
Two-layer QG model on the beta plane
Since this model is symmetric about midchannel,
all terms independently vanish We break the
symmetry adding an easterly torque F on one side
only
11
Jet sensitivity to torque position
Control run no torque
Remote torque
Jet is symmetric about midchannel
Easterly jet created on the side but the
original jet remains symmetric
12
Jet sensitivity to torque position
Control run no torque
Torque within eddy-dominated region
Jet is symmetric about midchannel
When the eddies interact, they make the jet shift
poleward
13
Jet sensitivity to torque position
As the torque moves closer to the center of the
channel, the jet shift increases
Eventually, the jet moves back to the center of
the channel and symmetry is recovered
14
Jet symmetry budget
Terms contributing to jet shift
Friction
Eddy forcing
Torque forcing
  • For a remote torque, its forcing is simply
    balanced by friction
  • As the torque approaches the eddy dominated
    region, there is a positive eddy feedback that
    amplifies the torque forcing
  • This results in a shift of the jet

15
Jet sensitivity to torque strength
At a given position, the jet shift increases with
increasing torque
16
Jet sensitivity to torque strength
This can again be explained using the jet
symmetry budget
17
The eddies also shift
18
Mechanisms of eddy-zonal mean feedback
Thats the big question!!! And a very difficult
question too
  • Some proposed mechanisms
  • Different eddy lifecycles (LC1 vs LC2) due to
    changes in barotropic shear/refractive index/eddy
    propagation
  • Meridional displacement of critical layers due
    to differential acceleration
  • Resilience of the jet to stay at its perturbed
    position due to the negative viscosity effect
    (i.e., the eddy generation shifts with the jet)
  • But we dont really know

We just submitted a proposal to investigate these
issues
19
Conclusions
  1. The zonal index (jet shift) is the leading form
    of zonal-mean extratropical variability and a
    fundamental part of the forced response.
  2. This mode varies on longer time scales than the
    driving eddies, which might be due to an
    eddy-mean flow feedback
  3. Eddy reinforcement may explain why this mode
    dominates the internal variability and why this
    is a preferred response in the forced problem.
  4. We have derived an evolution equation for the
    position of the jet, driven by asymmetry. The
    main forcing is the asymmetry in eddy momentum
    flux.
  5. In an idealized model, we showed that the eddy
    momentum flux tends to amplify other sources of
    asymmetry, implying a positive feedback.
  6. The dynamics of this feedback remains to be
    elucidated.

Thank you for your attention!
20
Other variables also shift, including the eddies
21
The NAO may be regarded as the regional
manifestation of that annular pattern
Gerber (2005)
22
From Lorenz and Hartmann (2001)
23
From Polvani and Esler (2008)
24
From Gerber et al (2008)
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