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IPV and the Dynamic Tropopause

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COMET. Feb. 20, 2002. IPV and the Dynamic Tropopause. John W. Nielsen-Gammon. 3 ... COMET. Feb. 20, 2002. IPV and the Dynamic Tropopause. John W. Nielsen ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IPV and the Dynamic Tropopause


1
IPV and the Dynamic Tropopause
  • John W. Nielsen-Gammon
  • Texas AM University
  • 979-862-2248 n-g_at_tamu.edu

2
Outline
  • PV basics
  • Seeing the world through PV
  • Waves and vortices
  • Nonconservation
  • Forecasting applications
  • Short-range forecasting
  • Tracking disturbances over the Rockies
  • Understanding the range of possibilities

3
Mathematical Definitions of PV
  • Rossby
  • Vorticity divided by theta surface spacing
  • Relative vorticity in isentropic
    coordinates
  • Minus sign makes PV positive since pressure
    decreases upward

4
Mathematical Definitions of PV
  • Rossby
  • Ertel
  • Vorticity times static stability

5
Units of Potential Vorticity
  • 1 PVU equalsyou dont want to know
  • Midlatitude Troposphere -0.2 to 3.0 PVU
  • Typical value 0.6 PVU
  • Midlatitude Stratosphere 1.5 to 10.0 PVU
  • Typical value 5.0 PVU

6
PV Cross Section Pole to Pole at 80W
7
PV and Westerlies (m/s)
8
PV and Absolute Vorticity (10-5 s-1)
9
PV and Potential Temperature (K)
380
350
330
280
310
10
What do PV gradients imply?
  • Steep PV gradients
  • Jet streams
  • High PV to left of jet
  • Vorticity gradients
  • Same sign as PV gradients
  • Stratification gradients
  • High stratification where PV is large
  • Vertical tropopause
  • Flat PV gradients
  • Boring
  • No wind or vorticity variations
  • Stratification high where PV is large
  • Flat tropopause

11
PV Contours 0, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8
12
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13
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14
PV Contours 0, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8
15
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16
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17
Strong PV gradients matter PV maxes and mins are
inconsequential
  • Jet stream follows PV gradients
  • Waves in the PV field correspond to waves in the
    jet stream
  • PV extrema bounded by strong gradients could mean
    short waves or cutoffs
  • High PV trough Low PV ridge

18
Forget PV! The Traditional Geopotential Height
Maps Work Fine!
  • Advantages of Height
  • Identification and assessment of features
  • Inference of wind and vorticity
  • Inference of vertical motion?
  • Disadvantages of Height
  • Gravity waves and topography
  • Inference of evolution and intensification
  • Role of diabatic processes is obscure
  • Need 300 500 mb

19
Whats PV Got that Traditional Maps Havent Got?
  • Advantages of PV
  • PV is conserved
  • PV unaffected by gravity waves and topography
  • PV at one level gives you heights at many levels
  • Easy to diagnose Dynamics
  • Disadvantages of PV
  • Unfamiliar
  • Not as easily available
  • Not easy to eyeball significant features
  • Qualitative inference of wind and vorticity
  • Hard to diagnose vertical motion?

20
DYNAMICS?
  • A given PV distribution implies a given wind and
    height distribution
  • If the PV changes, the winds and heights change
  • If you know how the PV is changing, you can infer
    everything else
  • And PV changes only by advection!

21
The PV Conundrum
  • Maps of mean PV between pressure surfaces
  • Encapsulates the PV distribution
  • Cannot diagnose evolution or dynamics

22
The PV Conundrum
  • IPV (Isentropic Potential Vorticity) maps
  • Many isentropic surfaces have dynamically
    significant PV gradients
  • Hard to know which isentropic surfaces to look at

23
The PV Solution Tropopause Maps
  • Pick a PV contour that lies within the (critical)
    tropopause PV gradient
  • Overlay this particular contour from all the
    different isentropic layers (or interpolate to
    that PV value)
  • Result one map showing the location of the
    important PV gradients at all levels
  • Contours advected by horizontal wind

24
The 1.5 PVU contour on the 320 K isentropic
surface is
25
identical to the 320 K contour on the 1.5 PVU
(tropopause) surface!
26
Color Fill Version of Tropopause Map
27
Tropopause Map with Jet Streams
28
Tropopause Map, hour 00
29
Tropopause Map, hour 06
30
Tropopause Map, hour 12
31
Tropopause Map, hour 18
32
Tropopause Map, hour 24
33
Tropopause Map, hour 30
34
Tropopause Map, hour 36
35
Tropopause Map, hour 42
36
Tropopause Map, hour 48
37
Tropopause Map, hour 48, with jets
38
Midway Point
  • Play with some PV
  • Watch a movie

39
PV Dynamics The Short Course
High PV / Stratosphere / Low Theta on Tropopause
Low PV / Troposphere / High Theta on Tropopause
40
Superposition
  • PV field
  • Basic state
  • Anomalies
  • Associated wind field
  • Basic state wind
  • Winds associated with each anomaly
  • Add em all up to get the total wind/PV

41
PV Anomaly A Wave on the Tropopause

42
PV Anomaly Anomalous Winds
Think of each PV anomaly as a cyclonic or
anticyclonic vortex

43
PV Wind Rules (for Northern Hemisphere)
  • Positive anomalies have cyclonic winds
  • Negative anomalies have anticyclonic winds
  • Winds strongest near anomaly
  • Winds decrease with horizontal distance
  • Winds decrease with vertical distance

44
PV Anomaly What will the total wind field be?
Short Wave

Planetary Wave

45
Wave Propagation
  • Individual waves propagate upstream
  • Short waves move slower than jet
  • Long waves actually retrogress



46
The Making of a Rossby Wave Packet
  • Trough amplifies downstream ridge
  • Ridge amplifies downstream trough, weakens
    upstream trough
  • Wave packet propagates downstream

-
-




47
Intensification Two Ways
  • Increase the size of the PV anomaly
  • Amplification
  • Increase the amount of PV (or number of PV
    anomalies) within a small area
  • Superposition

48
Tropopause, Feb. 10, 2001, 00Z
Amplification
Superposition?
49
Tropopause, Feb. 10, 2001, 06Z
50
Tropopause, Feb. 10, 2001, 12Z
51
Tropopause, Feb. 10, 2001, 18Z
52
Tropopause, Feb. 11, 2001, 00Z
53
500 mb, Feb. 10, 2001, 00Z
54
500 mb, Feb. 10, 2001, 06Z
55
500 mb, Feb. 10, 2001, 12Z
56
500 mb, Feb. 10, 2001, 18Z
57
500 mb, Feb. 11, 2001, 00Z
58
Low-Level Potential Temperature
  • Acts like upper-level PV
  • Locally high potential temperature cyclonic
    circulation
  • Locally low potential temperature anticyclonic
    circulation
  • But gradient is backwards
  • Winds from north intensify upper-level PV
  • Winds from south intensify low-level warm anomaly

59
MSLP (mb), 950 mb theta-e (K), 700-950 mb PV, 300
K 1.5 PV contour
60
Surface, Feb. 10, 2001, 06Z
61
Surface, Feb. 10, 2001, 12Z
62
Surface, Feb. 10, 2001, 18Z
63
Surface, Feb. 11, 2001, 00Z
64
Cyclogenesis
  • Mutual Amplification
  • Southerlies assoc. w/ upper-level trough
    intensify surface frontal wave
  • Northerlies assoc. w/ surface frontal wave
    intensify upper-level trough
  • Superposition
  • Trough and frontal wave approach and occlude

65
Diabatic Processes
  • Latent heating max in mid-troposphere
  • PV increases below LH max
  • PV decreases above LH max
  • Its as if PV is brought from aloft to low levels
    by latent heating
  • Strengthens the surface low and the upper-level
    downstream ridge

66
Diabatic Processes Diagnosis
  • Low-level PV increases
  • Upper-level PV decreases
  • Tropopause potential temperature increases

67
Diabatic Processes Prediction
  • Plot low-level equivalent potential temperature
    instead of potential temperature
  • Compare theta-e to the potential temperature of
    the tropopause
  • If theta-e is higher
  • Deep tropospheric instability
  • Moist convection likely, rapid cyclogenesis

68
Forecasting Applications (1)Evolution
  • Can directly diagnose evolution
  • Motion of upper-level systems
  • Intensification and weakening
  • Formation of new troughs and ridges downstream

69
Forecasting Applications (2)Model Correction
  • Can correct forecast for poor analyses or
    short-range deviation
  • Wheres the real trough?
  • How will it affect the things around it?
  • How will its surroundings affect its evolution?

70
Forecasting Applications (3)The Rockies
  • Can track systems over topography
  • Vorticity is altered by stretching and shrinking
    as parcels go over mountains
  • Potential vorticity is conserved on isentropic
    surfaces
  • PV shows you what the trough will look like once
    it leaves the mountains
  • Better forecasts, better comparison with
    observations

71
Forecasting Applications (4) Uncertainty
  • Can understand the range of possibilities
  • Could this trough intensify?
  • Could a downstream wave be triggered?
  • How many objects must be simulated correctly
    for the forecast to be accurate?

72
Summary
  • Definition of PV
  • IPV maps and tropopause maps
  • Diagnosis of evolution using PV
  • Dynamics using PV
  • Forecasting applications of PV
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