Abstract

Abstract A method for capturing the different dynamical components of the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) is presented. The tropical wind field is partitioned into three components using free-space Green’s functions: 1) a nondivergent component, 2) an irrotational component, and 3) a background or environmental flow that is interpreted as the influence on the tropical flow due to vorticity and divergence elements outside of the tropical region. The analyses performed in this study show that this background flow is partly determined by a train of extratropical waves. Space–time power spectra for each flow component are calculated. The strongest signal in the nondivergent wind spectrum corresponds to equatorial Rossby, mixed Rossby–gravity, and easterly waves. The strongest signal in the irrotational winds corresponds to Kelvin and inertia–gravity modes. The strongest signal in the power spectrum of the background flow corresponds to the wave band of extratropical Rossby waves. Furthermore, a coherence analysis reveals that the background flow has the highest coherence with geopotential height variations in the latitude bands from 30° to 45° in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. The flow partitions are further studied through a composite analysis based on the Wheeler–Hendon MJO index. Anomalies in the background flow are strongest in the western and central Pacific, possess an equivalent barotropic structure, and show an eastward propagation. By contrast, the irrotational and nondivergent winds possess a first-mode baroclinic structure. An oscillation in the zonally averaged background flow with the MJO phases is observed but contributes little to tropical angular momentum when compared to the nondivergent flow.

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