Abstract

Abstract. The horizontal propagation of Rossby waves in the upper troposphere has been a long-standing topic in dynamical meteorology. The concept of “waveguidability’’, i.e., the capability of the background flow to act as a zonal waveguide for Rossby waves, may prove useful to address this problem, but developing a systematic definition and quantification of such a property remains challenging. With an eye to such issues, the current paper suggests a novel and efficient algorithm to solve the linearized barotropic vorticity equation on a sphere in a forced-dissipative configuration. The algorithm allows one to obtain linear wave solutions resulting from arbitrary combinations of the forcing and the background zonal wind. These solutions can be used to systematically study single- and double-jet configurations and are employed here to show that the latitude of the jet stream does not appear to affect waveguidability. The onset of barotropic instability might hinder the applicability of the linear framework, but it is shown that the nonlinear flow evolution can still be retrieved qualitatively from the linearized solution, both for the stationary component of the wave field and for the temporal evolution of transient waves.

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