Abstract

The Northwestern Argentinean Low (NAL) intensifies the zonal component of the geopotential gradient to its east, intensifying the meridional wind and moisture flow from the tropics to the subtropics contibuting importantly to the South American Low-Level Jet and the Chaco Jet. This study compares two situations where the NAL is present in the continent’s subtropics: one where it is coupled with an extratropical transient trough to its south and another without this coupling. The coupled case, called the front case, is stronger in two ways: it is warmer and shows lower geopotential at the center of the NAL. It also shows much stronger moisture transport. Both cases show a similar trait in that moisture transport and the zonal component of the geopotential gradient east of the NAL peak in the coolest hours. The geopotential at the center of the no-front case remains roughly constant throughout the event. For the front case, it attains its minimum value in the six hours preceding the northeastward advance of the transient trough. These results suggest that there are different mechanisms acting at the center of the NAL and at its eastern branch, as well as in the front and no-front cases.

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