Abstract

Abstract It is shown that planetary-scale waves are inherently accompanied by latitudinal momentum transport when they propagate vertically in vertically sheared zonal flows. Because of the dependence of the wave's latitudinal scale on the intrinsic phase speed, positive (negative) vertical shear should force prograde (retrograde) waves to focus equatorward and retrograde (prograde) waves to expand poleward in the course of upward propagation. Consequently, Eliassen–Palm (EP) flux vectors are tilted from the vertical and nonzero latitudinal momentum fluxes occur. The direction of momentum transport should always be equatorward (poleward) in positive (negative) vertical shear irrespective of the zonal propagation direction. The idea was applied to upwardly propagating waves in the Venusian middle atmosphere, where vertical shear of strong midlatitude jets and equatorial superrotation exist. Numerical solutions showed that Kelvin and prograde inertio-gravity waves focus equatorward and mixed Rossby–gravity and Rossby waves expand poleward below the cloud top. The former is attributed primarily to the vertical shear of the superrotation, while the latter to the vertical shear beneath the midlatitude jets. Such characteristics of planetary-scale waves will cause angular momentum separation between high and low latitudes and, at least partly, contribute to the maintenance of the superrotation.

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