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Journal ArticleDOI

Some simple solutions for heat-induced tropical circulation.

A.E. Gill
- 01 Jul 1980 - 
- Vol. 106, Iss: 449, pp 447-462
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TLDR
In this article, a simple analytic model is constructed to elucidate some basic features of the response of the tropical atmosphere to diabatic heating, showing that there is considerable east-west asymmetry which can be illustrated by solutions for heating concentrated in an area of finite extent.
Abstract
A simple analytic model is constructed to elucidate some basic features of the response of the tropical atmosphere to diabatic heating. In particular, there is considerable east-west asymmetry which can be illustrated by solutions for heating concentrated in an area of finite extent. This is of more than academic interest because heating in practice tends to be concentrated in specific areas. For instance, a model with heating symmetric about the equator at Indonesian longitudes produces low-level easterly flow over the Pacific through propagation of Kelvin waves into the region. It also produces low-level westerly inflow over the Indian Ocean (but in a smaller region) because planetary waves propagate there. In the heating region itself the low-level flow is away from the equator as required by the vorticity equation. The return flow toward the equator is farther west because of planetary wave propagation, and so cyclonic flow is obtained around lows which form on the western margins of the heating zone. Another model solution with the heating displaced north of the equator provides a flow similar to the monsoon circulation of July and a simple model solution can also be found for heating concentrated along an inter-tropical convergence line.

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Atmospheric Modeling, Data Assimilation and Predictability

TL;DR: A comprehensive text and reference work on numerical weather prediction, first published in 2002, covers not only methods for numerical modeling, but also the important related areas of data assimilation and predictability.
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Coupled ocean–atmosphere dynamics in the Indian Ocean during 1997–98

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Atmospheric teleconnections from the equatorial pacific1

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the strong response of the northeast Pacific westerlies to big positive anomalies of equatorial sea temperature, observed in the winter of 1957-58, has been found to repeat during the major equatorial Sea temperature maxima in the winters of 1963-64 and 1965-66.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quasi-geostrophic motions in the equatorial area

TL;DR: In this article, a single layer of homogeneous incompressible fluid with free surface is treated, where the Coriolis parameter is assumed to be proportional to the latitude, and a strong east-west current was formed along the equator.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of a tropical “maritime continent” in the atmospheric circulation1

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the equatorial regions of South America and Africa and the "maritime continent" of Indonesia and the Carolines generate a much greater amount of heat for export than do equatorial oceanic regions.
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