Abstract

AbstractIntraseasonal oscillations affect the weather not just in the tropics but all around the globe. The convectively coupled equatorial Rossby wave is observed as the westward‐moving intraseasonal oscillation. The fundamental physics of its coupling is still unknown; thus, many questions remain unanswered. How is its phase speed altered by convection? What makes it unstable? Why is it an intraseasonal oscillation? Using the Fuchs and Raymond model with linearized governing equations on an equatorial beta plane, first baroclinic mode vertical structure, and moisture and wind‐induced surface heat exchange (WISHE) convective parametrizations, this paper seeks a fundamental analytical theory that can explain the basic features of the convectively coupled equatorial Rossby wave. The WISHE‐moisture theory leads to a large‐scale, unstable westward propagating mode in the n = 1 case, which we call the westward propagating WISHE‐moisture mode. We find that the westward propagating WISHE‐moisture mode is indeed the free equatorial Rossby wave in the absence of moisture closure and WISHE. It is propagating westward due to the beta effect, and it slows down when it is convectively coupled. Its phase speed decreases mainly due to WISHE and cloud‐radiation interactions. The x‐y structure of the pressure and horizontal winds is similar to the free and observed Rossby wave, with convergent net flow. The strongest easterlies are to the west of the precipitation maximum increasing the moisture in that area. The mode is unstable due to the interplay of surface fluxes and moisture, which increases as a function of zonal wavelength.

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