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Abstract

This idealized modeling study of moist baroclinic waves addresses the formation of moist ascending airstreams, so-called warm conveyor belts (WCBs), their characteristics, and their significance for the downstream flow evolution. Baroclinic wave simulations are performed on the f plane, growing from a finiteamplitude upper-level potential vorticity (PV) perturbation on a zonally uniform jet stream. This nonmodal approach allows for dispersive upstream and downstream development and for studying WCBs in the primary cyclone and the downstream cyclone. A saturation adjustment scheme is used as the only difference between the dry and moist simulations, which are systematically compared using a cyclone-tracking algorithm, with an eddy kinetic energy budget analysis, and from a PV perspective. Using trajectories and a selection criterion of maximum ascent, forward- and rearward-sloping WCBs in the moist simulation are identified. No WCB is identified in the dry simulation. Forward-sloping WCBs originate in the warm sector, move into the frontal fracture region, and ascend over the bent-back front, where maximum latent heating occurs in this simulation. The outflow of these WCBs is located at altitudes with prevailing zonal winds; they hence flow anticyclonically ("forward") into the downstream ridge. In case of a slightly weaker ascent, WCBs curve cyclonically ("rearward") above the cyclone center. A detailed analysis of the PV evolution along the WCBs reveals PV production in the lower troposphere and destruction in the upper troposphere. Consequently, WCBs transport low-PV air into their outflow region, which contributes to the formation of distinct negative PV anomalies. They, in turn, affect the downstream flow and enhance downstream cyclogenesis. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Warm Conveyor Belts in Idealized Moist Baroclinic Wave Simulations*
Publication title
Volume
70
Issue
2
Pages
627-652
Number of pages
26
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Feb 2013
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Place of publication
Boston
Country of publication
United States
Publication subject
ISSN
00224928
e-ISSN
15200469
CODEN
JAHSAK
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Feature
Document feature
Equations; Maps; Tables; Graphs; References
ProQuest document ID
1317402006
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/warm-conveyor-belts-idealized-moist-baroclinic/docview/1317402006/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Copyright American Meteorological Society Feb 2013
Last updated
2024-10-04
Database
ProQuest One Academic