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Tropical vorticity forcing and superrotation in the spherical shallow‐water equations
Author(s) -
Suhas D. L.,
Sukhatme Jai,
Monteiro Joy M.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
quarterly journal of the royal meteorological society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.744
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1477-870X
pISSN - 0035-9009
DOI - 10.1002/qj.2979
Subject(s) - equator , potential vorticity , vorticity , physics , forcing (mathematics) , zonal flow (plasma) , geophysical fluid dynamics , vortex , atmospheric sciences , geophysics , momentum (technical analysis) , vorticity equation , climatology , mechanics , classical mechanics , geology , finance , economics , quantum mechanics , astronomy , plasma , tokamak , latitude
The response of the nonlinear shallow‐water equations (SWE) on a sphere to tropical vorticity forcing is examined, with an emphasis on momentum fluxes and the emergence of a superrotating state. Fixing the radiative damping and momentum drag time‐scales to be of the order of a few days, a state of superrotation (SR) is shown to emerge under steady large‐scale and random small‐scale vorticity forcing. In the first example, the stationary response to a pair of equal and oppositely signed vortices placed on the Equator is considered. Here, the equatorial flux budget is dominated by the eddy fluxes and these drive the system into a state of SR. Eventually, the flux associated with the momentum drag increases to balance the eddy fluxes, resulting in a steady state with a superrotating jet at the Equator. The initial value problem with these twin vortices also exhibits SR driven by eddy fluxes. Curiously, this transient solution spontaneously propagates westward and continually circumnavigates the globe. It is worth emphasizing that this SR state does not rely on any particular form of dissipation at large scales and is, in fact, observed even in the absence of any large‐scale damping mechanism. In the second example, a random small‐scale vorticity forcing is applied across the Tropics. The statistically steady state obtained is fairly turbulent in nature, but here too the eddy fluxes dominate and the system exhibits SR. It is important to note that, in both these cases, the direct forcing of the zonal mean zonal flow is zero by construction and the eddy fluxes at the Equator are responsible for its eastward acceleration. Further, in both these examples, the rotational part of the flow dominates the momentum fluxes as well as the stationary zonal mean zonal flow itself. Arguments based on the nature of potential vorticity and enstrophy are put forth to shed some light on these results.

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