Emergence and equilibration of jets in beta-plane turbulence: applications of Stochastic Structural Stability Theory
Navid C. Constantinou, Brian F. Farrell, Petros J. Ioannou

TL;DR
This paper uses Stochastic Structural Stability Theory (S3T) to analytically understand how jets form, equilibrate, and break down in planetary atmospheres, comparing predictions with simulations and revealing the role of non-zonal structures.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that S3T accurately predicts jet bifurcations and equilibria, including non-zonal structures, and explains their emergence from linear instabilities and nonlinear modifications.
Findings
S3T predicts jet formation and breakdown consistent with simulations.
Non-zonal structures arise from S3T instability and modify turbulence spectra.
Jets can exist at subcritical parameters, indicating stable modes excited by turbulence.
Abstract
Stochastic Structural Stability Theory (S3T) provides analytical methods for understanding the emergence and equilibration of jets from the turbulence in planetary atmospheres based on the dynamics of the statistical mean state of the turbulence closed at second order. Predictions for formation and equilibration of turbulent jets made using S3T are critically compared with results of simulations made using the associated quasi-linear and nonlinear models. S3T predicts the observed bifurcation behavior associated with the emergence of jets, their equilibration and their breakdown as a function of parameters. Quantitative differences in bifurcation parameter values between predictions of S3T and results of nonlinear simulations are traced to modification of the eddy spectrum which results from two processes: nonlinear eddy-eddy interactions and formation of discrete non-zonal structures.…
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