Abstract

Abstract This study examines the structure and driving mechanisms of upper-tropospheric intraseasonal zonal wind anomalies over the Western Hemisphere (WH) during the convective initiation of the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) over the Indian Ocean using composite and budget analyses. The initiating MJO convection is more often associated with WH upper-tropospheric intraseasonal easterly wind anomalies, and when it is, it tends to develop a stronger and zonally broader envelope of enhanced convection than events associated with westerly wind anomalies. The WH upper-tropospheric zonal wind anomaly associated with the MJO is often described as a dry Kelvin wave radiated from MJO convection, but the results show that both the structure and driving mechanisms are different from the ones of theoretical Kelvin waves. Unlike the theoretical Kelvin wave, the zonal wind anomaly is not driven mainly by the zonal pressure gradient force and it is strongly coupled with rotational wind associated with subtropical and equatorward-propagating midlatitude Rossby waves. The intraseasonal zonal wind anomaly amplifies over the eastern Pacific and Atlantic basins because of advection of the background wind by intraseasonal wind in the presence of background zonal wind convergence, which allows acceleration in the same sign of the present intraseasonal zonal wind anomaly. A part of the WH intraseasonal easterly wind initiates in the lower stratosphere and is advected downward as it merges with eastward-propagating easterly wind in the upper troposphere. The initial sources of the lower-stratospheric intraseasonal easterly wind include equatorward intrusion of midlatitude waves and an equatorial Rossby wave.

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