Abstract

Abstract. We examine the group dynamic of African easterly waves (AEWs) generated in a realistic, spatially non-homogeneous African easterly jet (AEJ) using an idealized general circulation model. Our objective is to investigate whether the limited zonal extent of the AEJ is an impediment to AEW development. We construct a series of basic states using global reanalysis fields and initialize waves via transient heating over West Africa. The dominant response is a localized, near-stationary wave packet that disperses upstream and downstream. The inclusion of a crude representation of boundary layer damping stabilizes the waves in most cases, consistent with other studies in the past. In some basic states, however, exponential growth occurs even in the presence of damping. This shows that AEWs can occasionally emerge spontaneously. The key result is that, whether triggered by an external forcing or generated internally, the wave packet can remain within the AEJ for multiple wave periods instead of being swept away. Drawing from other studies, this also suggests that even the damped waves can grow if coupled with additional sources of energy such as moist convection and dust radiative feedback. The wave packet in the localized AEJ appears to satisfy a condition for absolute instability, a form of spatial hydrodynamic instability. However, this needs to be verified more rigorously. We conclude that the limited zonal extent of the AEJ is not an impediment. Our results also suggest that the intermittent nature of AEWs is mediated, not by transitions between convective and absolute instability, but likely by external sources such as propagating equatorial wave modes.

Highlights

  • African easterly waves (AEWs) are the dominant synopticscale feature of the summertime West African monsoon (WAM)

  • Burpee (1972) showed that the climatological basic state over North Africa is associated with a reversal in the meridional gradient of potential vorticity (PV), satisfying the necessary condition for mixed baroclinic–barotropic instability (Charney and Stern, 1962)

  • Our objective is to address it by elucidating a key property of the wave packets generated in the localized African easterly jet (AEJ)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

African easterly waves (AEWs) are the dominant synopticscale feature of the summertime West African monsoon (WAM). The fastest-growing (or slowest-decaying) normal modes of the AEJ in idealized numerical models appear to have wave number and frequency that are close to observed AEWs (e.g., Rennick, 1976; Simmons, 1977; Thorncroft and Hoskins, 1994; Leroux and Hall, 2009). In this regard, hydrodynamic instability has been a useful model to account for the existence of AEWs

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call