When tiny convective spread affects a midlatitude jet: spread sequence
Edward Groot, Michael Riemer

TL;DR
This study examines how tiny initial uncertainties in convection can influence the evolution of a midlatitude jet stream over three days, revealing flow-dependent interactions and the significant role of longwave radiation.
Contribution
It demonstrates the flow-dependent nature of convective influence on jet streams and highlights the importance of longwave radiation in spread evolution, extending previous models.
Findings
Convective variability projects onto the jet via different pathways.
Longwave radiation significantly influences spread evolution.
Flow dependence affects convection's impact on the jet stream.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of spread over three days in a numerical ensemble experiment starting from tiny initial condition uncertainty. We simulate a real event during which three mesoscale convective systems occur in close proximity to the midlatitude jet. The spread evolution is compared with an existing conceptual three-stage model. Each system follows the first stage, characterised by development of convective variability. Nevertheless, we find significant variation among the systems in their propensity to interact with the jet stream, which characterises conceptual stage 2. One exemplary convective system follows the conceptual evolution of Baumgart et al., i.e., convective uncertainty initially projects onto the jet by upper-tropospheric outflow, which further amplifies spread through nonlinear growth as it propagates downstream. Rossby-like dispersion in the downstream spread…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAerodynamics and Acoustics in Jet Flows · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations
