Abstract

GCM simulations and data for the August 6-8, 1979 period are used to investigate the effect of tropical latent heat release in accelerations of the Southern Hemisphere subtropical jet. The analysis indicates that the jet accelerations were due both to external and internal Rossby modes, with somewhat stronger contributions from the external mode. The case study and GCM results suggest that divergent circulations which project mostly into inertia-gravity waves react to changes in latent heat release in 1-2 days, that the impact in subtropical latitudes to latent heat release is felt in 2-4 days, and that this impact becomes fully established after about 6 days.

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