Do transient gravity waves in a shear flow break?
β Scribed by M. Pulido; C. Rodas
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 644 KB
- Volume
- 134
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0035-9009
- DOI
- 10.1002/qj.272
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The propagation of transient gravity waves in a shear flow towards their critical levels is examined using a ray tracing approximation and a higherβdegree (quasiβoptic) approximation. Because of its transient forcing, the amplitude of transient waves decays to zero in the neighbourhood of the critical region so that it is not clear whether transient gravity waves will reach the convective instability threshold or not. The analysis shows that the horizontal perturbation decays asymptotically as the inverse of the square root of time, while the vertical wavenumber depends linearly on time, thus transient gravity waves attain convective instability for long times. The theoretical results are compared with numerical simulations. The ray path approximation is not able to reproduce the maximum amplitude, but the quasiβoptic approximation gives a reasonable agreement at short and long times. There are three breaking regimes for transient gravity waves. For wave packets with a narrow frequency spectrum (quasiβsteady waves) and large enough initial wave amplitude, the wave breaking is similar to the abrupt monochromatic wave overturning. On the other hand, highly transient wave packets will dissipate near the critical region for very long times with small wave amplitudes and high vertical wavenumber. The third regime is a transition between the two extremes; in this case both wave amplitude and vertical wavenumber are important to produce the convective threshold. The dependencies of the convective instability height (a quantity that may be useful for gravity wave parametrizations) on the Richardson number and the frequency spectral width are obtained. Copyright Β© 2008 Royal Meteorological Society
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract During a routine instrumentation flight check in the lower stratosphere periodic variations of temperature and winds were observed. It is deduced that these variations are gravity waves which appear to be associated with a narrow frontal zone separating regions with different potential