Baroclinic stationary waves in aquaplanet models
Giuseppe Zappa, Valerio Lucarini, Antonio Navarra

TL;DR
This paper investigates the nature and dynamics of persistent low-frequency stationary waves in aquaplanet models, revealing their baroclinic energy conversion, phase locking with tropical convection, and implications for Earth's atmospheric variability.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of quasi-stationary waves, their dispersion relations, energy conversion mechanisms, and how they relate to observed low-frequency atmospheric waves.
Findings
Wave five is part of a wave packet with a well-defined dispersion relation.
Baroclinic energy conversion occurs mainly for wavenumbers greater than five.
The wave's properties are influenced by SST gradients and the upper tropospheric jet stream.
Abstract
An aquaplanet model is used to study the nature of the highly persistent low frequency waves that have been observed in models forced by zonally symmetric boundary conditions. Using the Hayashi spectral analysis of the extratropical waves, we find that a quasi-stationary (QS) wave five belongs to a wave packet obeying a well defined dispersion relation with eastward group velocity. The components of the dispersion relation with k>5 baroclinically convert eddy available potential energy into eddy kinetic energy, while those with k<5 are baroclinically neutral. In agreement with the Green's model of baroclinic instability, the wave five is weakly unstable, and the inverse energy cascade, which had been previously proposed as a main forcing for this type of waves, only acts as a positive feedback on its predominantly baroclinic energetics. The QS wave is reinforced by a phase lock to an…
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