Publication | Closed Access
Influence of the vertical and zonal propagation of stratospheric planetary waves on tropospheric blockings
86
Citations
33
References
2013
Year
Upper AtmosphereOcean DynamicsEngineeringEarth ScienceGeophysicsAtmospheric SciencePolar WarmingSuppressed Upward PropagationLower AtmosphereMeteorologyMesoscale MeteorologyWave PropagationTropospheric BlockingsClimate DynamicsClimatologyPacific BlockingMeteorological ForcingZonal PropagationStratospheric Planetary Waves
Abstract Case studies are used to elucidate the relationship between stratospheric planetary wave reflection and blocking formation in the troposphere. The enhanced upward propagation of a planetary‐scale wave packet from the Eurasian sector, involving a Euro‐Atlantic blocking, leads to a stratospheric sudden warming (SSW). Following the weakening of the stratospheric westerly jet due to polar warming, the stratospheric planetary wave packet then propagates downward over the American sector, inducing a ridge over the North Pacific as well as a trough over eastern Canada in the upper troposphere. The ridge promotes the formation of a Pacific blocking. This result explains why Pacific blockings tend to form after SSW, and why they are associated with suppressed upward propagation of planetary waves.
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