Nc. Lau et Mj. Nath, Observed and GCM-simulated westward-propagating, planetary-scale fluctuations with approximately three-week periods, M WEATH REV, 127(10), 1999, pp. 2324-2345
The structural characteristics and vorticity dynamics of westward-traveling
patterns (WTP) in the troposphere are examined using the National Centers
for Environmental Prediction-National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCEP
-NCAR) reanalyses based on observations for the 1973-95 period, as well as
the output from a 100-yr integration of a general circulation model (GCM) w
ith a rhomboidal truncation at 30 wavenumbers and 14 vertical levels. An id
entical set of diagnostic tools, including progressive/retrogressive varian
ce analysis, cross-spectra, and complex empirical orthogonal functions (EOF
s), are applied to the reanalysis and GCM datasets for 300-mb height. These
diagnoses all indicate that the WTP are most prominent during the cold sea
son in the high-latitude zone extending westward from northwestern Canada t
o northeastern Siberia, with a typical period of similar to 22 days. Outsta
nding episodes are identified an the basis of the temporal coefficients of
the leading complex EOF. Composite charts of the anomalous 300-mb height, s
ea level pressure, and 850-mb temperature fields at various phases of these
events are constructed. The typical circulation changes accompanying the p
assage of the WTP are similar to those associated with well-known regional
weather phenomena such as amplified pressure ridges over Alaska, cold air o
utbreaks over western North America and east Asia, and heavy snowfall over
the Pacific Northwest. The occurrence of the WTP over the North Pacific is
also characterized by notable changes in the spatial distribution and inten
sity of synoptic scale activity.
The contributions of relative vorticity advection, planetary vorticity adve
ction (the "beta effect"), and horizontal divergence to the vorticity tende
ncy in various phases of the composite wave at 300, 500, and 850 mb are inv
estigated. In the mid- and upper troposphere, the vorticity dynamics of the
UTP is similar to that of free external Rossby waves, with the beta effect
(which leads to westward propagation) being the dominant term, whereas the
eastward advection of relative vorticity is less important due to the weak
mean zonal flow in the Alaska-Siberia sector.
Most of the essential characteristics of the observed WTP deduced from the
NCEP-NCAR reanalyses are well reproduced by the GCM. The realism with which
this phenomenon can be simulated in a model environment offers considerabl
e promise for using the GCM as a tool for studying the impact of WTP on int
raseasonal atmospheric variability in extended model experiments, and for a
ssessing the dependence of the locality and activity level of the WTP on va
rious states of the ambient circulation.