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Convectively Coupled Equatorial Waves: Analysis of Clouds and Temperature in the Wavenumber–Frequency Domain

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TLDR
In this article, a wavenumber-frequency spectrum analysis is performed for all longitudes in the domain 158S−158N using a long (;18 years) twice-daily record of satellite-observed outgoing longwave radiation (OLR), a good proxy for deep tropical convection.
Abstract
A wavenumber-frequency spectrum analysis is performed for all longitudes in the domain 158S‐158N using a long (;18 years) twice-daily record of satellite-observed outgoing longwave radiation (OLR), a good proxy for deep tropical convection. The broad nature of the spectrum is red in both zonal wavenumber and frequency. By removing an estimated background spectrum, numerous statistically significant spectral peaks are isolated. Some of the peaks correspond quite well to the dispersion relations of the equatorially trapped wave modes of shallow water theory with implied equivalent depths in the range of 12‐50 m. Cross-spectrum analysis with the satellite-based microwave sounding unit deep-layer temperature data shows that these spectral peaks in the OLR are ‘‘coupled’’ with this dynamical field. The equivalent depths of the convectively coupled waves are shallower than those typical of equatorial waves uncoupled with convection. Such a small equivalent depth is thought to be a result of the interaction between convection and the dynamics. The convectively coupled equatorial waves identified correspond to the Kelvin, n 5 1 equatorial Rossby, mixed Rossby-gravity, n 5 0 eastward inertiogravity, n 5 1 westward inertio-gravity (WIG), and n 5 2 WIG waves. Additionally, the Madden‐Julian oscillation and tropical depression-type disturbances are present in the OLR spectra. These latter two features are unlike the convectively coupled equatorial waves due to their location away from the equatorial wave dispersion curves in the wavenumber-frequency domain. Extraction of the different convectively coupled disturbances in the time‐longitude domain is performed by filtering the OLR dataset for very specific zonal wavenumbers and frequencies. The geographical distribution of the variance of these filtered data gives further evidence that some of the spectral peaks correspond to particular equatorial wave modes. The results have implications for the cumulus parameterization problem, for the excitation of equatorial waves in the lower stratosphere, and for extended-range forecasting in the Tropics.

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Stochastic models for convective momentum transport.

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Scale Analysis for Large-Scale Tropical Atmospheric Dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, a scale analysis for large-scale dynamics over the tropics is performed, and it is shown that two regimes are competing: 1) a dynamics characterized by balance between the vertical advection term and diabatic heating in the thermodynamic equation, realized at horizontal scales less than L ∼ 103 km given a velocity scale U ∼ 10 m s−1, and 2) a linear equatorial wave dynamics modulated by convective diabastic heating.
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MetUM-GOML1: a near-globally coupled atmosphere–ocean-mixed-layer model

TL;DR: In this article, well-resolved air-sea interactions are simulated in a new ocean mixed-layer, coupled configuration of the Met Office Unified Model (MetUM-GOML), comprising the MetUM coupled to the Multi-Column K Profile Parameterization ocean (MC-KPP), which provides a vertically resolved, high near-surface resolution ocean at comparable computational cost to running in atmosphere-only mode.

Assessment of the accuracy of (re)analyses in the equatorial lower stratosphere

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Journal ArticleDOI

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