Horizontal wavenumber spectra of winds, temperature, and trace gases during the Pacific Exploratory Missions: 2. Gravity waves, quasi-two-dimensional turbulence, and vortical modes
Author(s)
Barrick, John D.; Cho, John Y. N.; Newell, Reginald E.
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We examine the horizontal wavenumber spectra of horizontal velocity and potential temperature collected by aircraft above the Pacific Ocean to determine whether gravity waves, quasi-two-dimensional (Q-2-D) turbulence, or vortical modes dominate atmospheric fluctuations at scale sizes of 1–100 km and altitudes of 2–12 km. We conclude from the study of Doppler-shifting effects that Q-2-D turbulence and/or vortical modes are more prevalent than gravity waves over the ocean, except in the equatorial zone. The results are consistent with recent numerical simulations of Q-2-D turbulence, which show that the characteristic inverse cascade of energy is greatly facilitated by the presence of background rotation. Furthermore, a Stokes-parameter analysis reveals the general paucity of coherent wavelike motions, although specific cases of gravity-wave propagation are observed. Finally, a case study of a long flight segment displays a k⁻³ horizontal velocity variance spectrum at scales longer than about 100 km. A Stokes-parameter analysis indicates that these large-scale fluctuations were likely due to vortical modes rather than inertio-gravity waves.
Date issued
1999-07Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary SciencesJournal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Citation
Cho, John Y. N. et al. “Horizontal Wavenumber Spectra of Winds, Temperature, and Trace Gases During the Pacific Exploratory Missions: 2. Gravity Waves, Quasi-Two-Dimensional Turbulence, and Vortical Modes.” Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 104, D13 (July 1999): 16297–16308 © 1999 American Geophysical Union
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2169-8996
2169-897X