On the local view of atmospheric available potential energy
Lenka Novak, Remi Tailleux

TL;DR
This paper develops a local, positive definite form of atmospheric available potential energy (APE), enabling detailed analysis of energy transport and variability in the atmosphere, including in observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a new, computable local APE framework for atmospheric data and demonstrates its application to observational datasets for the first time.
Findings
Local APE can be partitioned into mean and eddy components.
Advection from high latitudes supplies APE to storm tracks.
Greenland and Ross Sea regions show high APE variability.
Abstract
The possibility of constructing Lorenz's concept of available potential energy (APE) from a local principle has been known for some time, but has received very little attention so far. Yet, the local APE framework offers the advantage of providing a positive definite local form of potential energy, which like kinetic energy can be transported, converted, and created/dissipated locally. In contrast to Lorenz's definition, which relies on the exact from of potential energy, the local APE theory uses the particular form of potential energy appropriate to the approximations considered. In this paper, this idea is illustrated for the dry hydrostatic primitive equations, whose relevant form of potential energy is the specific enthalpy. The local APE density is non-quadratic in general, but can nevertheless be partitioned exactly into mean and eddy components regardless of the Reynolds…
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