
Interpreting the Opposition between Two Block-Onset Forcing Mechanisms
Author(s) -
Lijun Dong,
Stephen J. Colucci
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of the atmospheric sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.853
H-Index - 173
eISSN - 1520-0469
pISSN - 0022-4928
DOI - 10.1175/jas3936.1
Subject(s) - barotropic fluid , potential vorticity , advection , rossby wave , atmospheric wave , geology , middle latitudes , physics , gravity wave , forcing (mathematics) , climatology , synoptic scale meteorology , wavelength , vorticity , geostrophic wind , geophysics , atmospheric sciences , gravitational wave , meteorology , astrophysics , vortex , optics , thermodynamics
The opposition between two block-onset forcing mechanisms, previously identified in midtropospheric analyses over the Southern Hemisphere midlatitudes, is analytically interpreted with an idealized model. These mechanisms are the interaction (F inter ) between deformation and potential vorticity and the advection (F adv ) of meridionally varying potential vorticity. Weather systems of concern, primarily consisting of planetary- and synoptic-scale waves, mostly fall into two regimes of zonal and meridional wavenumber space in which the opposition between the two block-onset forcing mechanisms is analytically derived. A synoptic interpretation of this opposition is schematically presented within the framework of barotropic dynamics. It is found that whether blocking occurs in diffluent or confluent flow depends upon the critical wavelength associated with the geostrophic flow. Blocking tends to take place in the diffluent flow of long waves in which F inter dominates over F adv . In addition, blocking also tends to occur in the confluent flow of relative short waves in which F adv prevails over F inter . An investigation of Rossby wave phase speeds in one diagnosed case reveals a lengthening with time of the dominant wave until it reaches the stationary wavelength on the block-onset day. In this context blocking may be understood as a stationarity and thus persistence of one of the two block-onset forcing mechanisms.