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    Long-Lived Response of the Midlatitude Circulation and Storm Tracks to Pulses of Tropical Heating

    Source: Journal of Climate:;2014:;volume( 027 ):;issue: 023::page 8809
    Author:
    Branstator, Grant
    DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00312.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: he midlatitude response to localized equatorial heating events that last 2 days is examined through experimentation with an atmospheric general circulation model. Such responses are argued to be important because many tropical rainfall events only last a short time and because the responses to such pulses serve as building blocks with which to study the impacts of more general heating fluctuations.The experiments indicate that short-lived heating produces responses in midlatitudes at locations far removed from the source and these responses persist much longer than the pulses themselves. Indeed pulse forcing, which is essentially white in time, produces upper-tropospheric responses that have an e-damping time of almost a week and that are detectable for more than two weeks in the experiments. Moreover the upper-tropospheric structure of the reaction to short pulses is remarkably similar to the reaction to steady tropical heating, including having a preference for occurring at special geographical locations and being composed of recurring patterns that resemble the leading patterns of responses to steady heating. This similarity is argued to be a consequence of the responses to pulses having little or no phase propagation in the extratropics. The impact of short-lived tropical heating also produces a persistent response in midlatitude surface fields and in the statistics of synoptic eddies.The implications these results have for subseasonal variability are discussed. These include 1) the potential for improving subseasonal prediction through improved assimilation and short-range forecasts of tropical precipitation and 2) the difficulties involved in attributing subseasonal midlatitude events to tropical heating.
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      Long-Lived Response of the Midlatitude Circulation and Storm Tracks to Pulses of Tropical Heating

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    contributor authorBranstator, Grant
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:10:34Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:10:34Z
    date copyright2014/12/01
    date issued2014
    identifier issn0894-8755
    identifier otherams-80593.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4223502
    description abstracthe midlatitude response to localized equatorial heating events that last 2 days is examined through experimentation with an atmospheric general circulation model. Such responses are argued to be important because many tropical rainfall events only last a short time and because the responses to such pulses serve as building blocks with which to study the impacts of more general heating fluctuations.The experiments indicate that short-lived heating produces responses in midlatitudes at locations far removed from the source and these responses persist much longer than the pulses themselves. Indeed pulse forcing, which is essentially white in time, produces upper-tropospheric responses that have an e-damping time of almost a week and that are detectable for more than two weeks in the experiments. Moreover the upper-tropospheric structure of the reaction to short pulses is remarkably similar to the reaction to steady tropical heating, including having a preference for occurring at special geographical locations and being composed of recurring patterns that resemble the leading patterns of responses to steady heating. This similarity is argued to be a consequence of the responses to pulses having little or no phase propagation in the extratropics. The impact of short-lived tropical heating also produces a persistent response in midlatitude surface fields and in the statistics of synoptic eddies.The implications these results have for subseasonal variability are discussed. These include 1) the potential for improving subseasonal prediction through improved assimilation and short-range forecasts of tropical precipitation and 2) the difficulties involved in attributing subseasonal midlatitude events to tropical heating.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleLong-Lived Response of the Midlatitude Circulation and Storm Tracks to Pulses of Tropical Heating
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume27
    journal issue23
    journal titleJournal of Climate
    identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00312.1
    journal fristpage8809
    journal lastpage8826
    treeJournal of Climate:;2014:;volume( 027 ):;issue: 023
    contenttypeFulltext
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