Friday, October 3, 2014

Long Waves, Short Waves, and All That

The atmosphere is full of waves, from gravity waves similar to those you see on water and at the beach, to Rossby waves, which cover distances of hundreds to thousands of kilometers and dominate the large-scale atmospheric circulation in midlatitudes.

Rossby waves are named for Carl-Gustaf Rossby, to my knowledge the only meteorologist who has ever appeared on the cover of Time Magazine.

Carl-Gustaf Rossby on the cover of Time Magazine, Dec 17, 1956
Rossby was a Swedish born meteorologist who immigrated to the United States and served in various capacities at the U.S. Weather Bureau (now the National Weather Service), MIT, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and the University of Chicago.  He joined the latter in 1940 at a time when we were just beginning to improve our observation of the upper-levels of the atmosphere and our knowledge of the jet stream and large-scale upper-level waves.

Two key characteristics of Rossby waves are: (1) they move slower than the flow and (2) long waves move slower than short waves.  As a result, long waves, which typically have wavelengths of a few thousand kilometers, tend to move very slowly, while the short waves move through them.  Rossby showed why this is the case.  It is the direct result of the rotation of the Earth, which slows the downstream progression of waves and has a greater influence on long waves than short waves, resulting in the former moving slower than the faster.

Knowledge of Rossby wave characteristics helps us to understand the forecast for the next several days.  The 500-mb height analysis (an "upper level") for this morning shows a pattern that is dominated by long waves.  There is a deep trough over the north Pacific near 170W, a ridge over western North America, and then another deep trough over eastern North America.  This long wave pattern continues downstream over the Atlantic.


Since long waves tend to move slowly, one might expect that this pattern will evolve slowly, and indeed that is the case in the GFS forecast for this morning, next Wednesday morning, and next Friday at noon.  Troughing persists over the north Pacific, ridging persists over western North America, and the trough over eastern North America moves slowly eastward.  




So, as we enjoy the beautiful fall weather, you can thank the high-amplitude, long-wave pattern that is dominating the Northern Hemisphere over the next several days.  Time will tell how long this pattern can hold on.

2 comments:

  1. I did some biking up in the Wasatch yesterday (mainly on the road), as the ground up there is incredibly wet and soggy. It is also pretty wet at the lower elevations and I think this is true over pretty much the entire region at this point. Typically with a ridge pattern like this in October, we would have pretty good afternoon mixing along with a fairly large diurnal temperature range. With the wet surface conditions, however, I wonder if we will have a more muted diurnal cycle and some trouble mixing out well in the valley, along with some atmospheric moisture accumulation at lower elevations. Hoping not to see much of any smog but I am wondering how this surface moisture will affect things this time of year.

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  2. Takes me back to Differential Equations...

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