Available potential vorticity and the wave-vortex decomposition for arbitrary stratification
Jeffrey J. Early, Gerardo Hern\'andez-Due\~nas, Leslie M. Smith,, M.-Pascale Lelong

TL;DR
This paper develops a new formulation of available potential vorticity for arbitrary stratification, enabling a wave-vortex decomposition that clarifies flow constituents and their energetics in rotating non-hydrostatic flows.
Contribution
It introduces a closed-form APV expression in terms of isopycnal deviation and demonstrates a PV-inversion based wave-vortex decomposition applicable to arbitrary stratification.
Findings
New APV expression linearizes to QGPV under certain conditions
Flow decomposed into gravity waves, geostrophic, inertial, and density modes
Application to mesoscale eddy reveals vertical structure constraints
Abstract
We consider a rotating non-hydrostatic flow with arbitrary stratification and argue that 1) the appropriate form of potential vorticity (PV) for this system is in terms of isopycnal deviation and 2) the decomposition into energetically orthogonal solutions is fundamentally a PV-inversion. The new closed-form expression for available potential vorticity (APV) is expressed in terms of isopycnal deviation, following the ideas in Wagner & Young (2015). This form of APV linearizes to quasigeostrophic PV (QGPV) after discarding the nonlinear stretching term and a height nonlinearity, the latter of which is not present in constant stratification. This formulation leads to positive definite definitions of potential enstrophy and total energy expressed in terms of isopycnal deviation, from which the quadratic versions emerge at lowest order. It is exactly these quantities diagonalized by the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsOcean Waves and Remote Sensing · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
