Turbulence and equatorial waves in moist and dry shallow water systems
Turbulence and large-scale waves in the tropical region are studied using the spherical shallow water equations. With mesoscale vorticity forcing, both moist and dry systems show kinetic energy scaling that is dominated by rotational modes, has a -5/3 exponent. At larger planetary scales, the diverg...
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Zusammenfassung: | Turbulence and large-scale waves in the tropical region are studied using the
spherical shallow water equations. With mesoscale vorticity forcing, both moist
and dry systems show kinetic energy scaling that is dominated by rotational
modes, has a -5/3 exponent. At larger planetary scales, the divergent component
of the energy increases and we see a footprint of tropical waves. The dry
system shows a signature of the entire family of equatorial waves, while the
moist simulations only show low frequency Rossby, Kelvin and mixed Rossby
gravity waves with an equivalent depth that matches rapid condensation
estimates. Further, runs with interactive moisture exhibit spontaneous
aggregation with the equilibrium moist energy spectrum obeying a -2 power-law.
Synoptic scale moisture anomalies form in heterogeneous background saturation,
and are sustained by advection and convergence, within rotational gyres that
dominate the tropical region. In that case, along with equatorial waves and
turbulence, a large-scale eastward moving moisture wave appears in the
midlatitudes. In all simulations with upscale energy transfer, a systematic
equatorial zonal mean zonal flow develops which is easterly and westerly for
the dry and moist ensembles, respectively.The interaction of this zonal mean
flow with a spatially heterogeneous saturation field results in the formation
of a moist stationary tropical wave. The super-rotating flow is driven by
rotational eddy momentum fluxes due to enhanced equatorial Rossby wave activity
in the moist runs. The nature of eddies is such that the tropical circulation
in the dry and moist cases tends to homogenize and exaggerate potential
vorticity gradients, respectively. These experiments demonstrate the
co-existence of tropical waves and turbulence, and highlight the fact that the
vortical and divergent wind are inextricably linked with the evolving moisture
field. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2104.12889 |