Abstract

Abstract. A novel method is introduced to identify and track the life cycle of upper-level troughs and ridges. The aim is to close the existing gap between methods that detect the initiation phase of upper-level Rossby wave development and methods that detect Rossby wave breaking and decaying waves. The presented method quantifies the horizontal trough and ridge orientation and identifies the corresponding trough and ridge axes. These allow us to study the dynamics of pre- and post-trough–ridge regions separately. The method is based on the curvature of the geopotential height at a given isobaric surface and is computationally efficient. Spatiotemporal tracking allows us to quantify the maturity of troughs and ridges and could also be used to study the temporal evolution of the trough or ridge orientation. First, the algorithm is introduced in detail, and several illustrative applications – such as a downstream development from the North Atlantic into the Mediterranean – and seasonal climatologies are discussed. For example, the climatological trough and ridge orientations reveal strong zonal and meridional asymmetry: over land, most troughs and ridges are anticyclonically oriented, while they are cyclonically oriented over the main oceanic storm tracks; the cyclonic orientation increases toward the poles, while the anticyclonic orientation increases toward the Equator. Trough detection frequencies are climatologically high downstream of the Rocky Mountains and over East Asia and eastern Europe but are remarkably low downstream of Greenland. Furthermore, the detection frequencies of troughs are high at the end of the North Pacific storm track and at the end of the North Atlantic storm track over the British Isles. During El Niño-affected winters, troughs and ridges exhibit an anomalously strong cyclonic tilt over North America and the North Atlantic, in agreement with previous findings based on traditional variance-based diagnostics such as E vectors. During La Niña, the situation is essentially reversed. The orientation of troughs and ridges also depends on the jet position. For example, during midwinter over the Pacific, when the subtropical jet is strongest and located farthest equatorward, cyclonically oriented troughs and ridges dominate the climatology. Finally, the identified troughs and ridges are used as starting points for 24 h backward parcel trajectories, and a discussion of the distribution of pressure, potential temperature and potential vorticity changes along the trajectories is provided to give insight into the three-dimensional nature of troughs and ridges.

Highlights

  • Troughs and ridges are ubiquitous flow features in the upper troposphere and are centerpieces of weather and climate research for good reason

  • It is depicted as a region of reduced geopotential height on an isobaric surface or enhanced potential vorticity on an isentropic surface

  • The counterpart of a trough is a ridge, which is associated with warm air moving poleward, increased geopotential height – corresponding to reduced potential vorticity (PV) – and anticyclonic flow

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Summary

Introduction

Troughs and ridges are ubiquitous flow features in the upper troposphere and are centerpieces of weather and climate research for good reason. The notion of cyclonically and anticyclonically oriented wave development is schematically summarized in Fig. 12 in Thorncroft et al (1993) This process, through which cyclonically or anticyclonically breaking troughs and ridges displace the jet, is even able to excite positive or negative North Atlantic Oscillation events (Benedict et al, 2004; Franzke et al, 2004; Rivière and Orlanski, 2007). The air is diabatically modified – for example by condensation – in a way that amplifies the upper-level ridge and the anticyclonic flow downstream of the surface cyclone (Stoelinga, 1996; Wernli and Davies, 1997; Grams et al, 2011; Schemm et al, 2013) This process amplifies the streamer formation (Massacand et al, 2001) and accelerates the jet.

Data and methods
Trough and ridge identification
Climatologies
ENSO-affected winter seasons
The North Pacific storm track in midwinter
Lagrangian perspective on troughs and ridges
Summary
Findings
Caveats and outlook
Full Text
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