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The thermally coupled response of the planetary scale circulation to the global distribution of heat sources and sinks

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The time-averaged structure of global monsoonal circulations and planetary scale transport processes were determined from the FGGE Level IIIa operational data set generated by the US National Meteorological Center.
Abstract
The time-averaged structure of global monsoonal circulations and planetary scale transport processes are determined from the FGGE Level IIIa operational data set generated by the US National Meteorological Center. Through isentropic diagnostics, rotational and irrotational components of the horizontal mass transport and the distribution of heating for the planetary scale are analyzed for the months of January. April, July and October of 1979. The global monsoonal circulations coupled with the planetary scale of differential heating occur in the form of large scale Hadley-type and Walker-type circulations. Net heating within a given region and net cooling in another region in association with latent heat release and differences in boundary flux of energy through the earth's surface and the top of the atmosphere result in forcing of isentropic mass circulations that link energy source with energy sink regions, a result basic to thermally forced circulations. The primary planetary source of energy in the region of Indonesia-Philippines-Southeast Asia is linked through isentropic mass transport with sinks of energy in the regions of the two circumpolar vortices, the Sahara and subtropical anticyclonic circulations. This primary center of the source of energy in the Indonesia-Southeast Asia area moves seasonally from one hemisphere to the other. Other source regions of energy occur over Brazil in January and Central America and Africa in July. Through horizontal transport of mass and energy, the winter Asiatic monsoonal circulation links radiative cooling over Asia to sensible and latent heat release within mid-latitude baroclinic waves and also to latent heat release in the Indonesia, Philippine and New Guinea regions. The role of mid-latitude baroclinic waves in providing for mass and energy exchange between polar and subtropical regions within the time-averaged isentropic structure is briefly discussed. DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0870.1985.tb00274.x

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Book ChapterDOI

The Forcing and Maintenance of Global Monsoonal Circulations: An Isentropic Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, an isentropic analysis of the forcing and maintenance of global monsoonal circulations is presented, which is based on the joint application of mass, energy, and entropy principles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of Processes Driving Low-Level Westerlies in West Equatorial Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated and characterised the control mechanisms of the low-level circulation over west equatorial Africa (WEA) using four reanalysis datasets, focusing on the contribution of the divergent and rotational circulation to the total flow.
Book ChapterDOI

Chapter 22 – Entropy, the Lorenz Energy Cycle, and Climate

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the classical concepts of entropy and the processes that change it in relation to the Lorenz energy cycle and climate and found that entropy concepts are fundamental to the study of large-scale exchange, monsoons and the thermodynamic efficiency of differential heating in maintaining atmospheric circulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The three-dimensional distribution of atmospheric heating during the GWE

TL;DR: In this paper, the three-dimensional global distributions of time-averaged atmospheric heating for January, April, July and October 1979 are estimated from the ECMWF GWE Level IIIb data set.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Tropical East–West Circulations During the Northern Winter

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the geometry and intensity of the mean east-west circulation during the northern winter and show that near the equatorial latitudes two pronounced regions of divergent mass outflow in the upper troposphere are found near the convective regions over the northwestern part of South America and Indonesia.
Book ChapterDOI

Smoothing and Filtering of Time Series and Space Fields

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss several smoothing methods, including time smoothing, space smoothing and band-pass filtering, and show that smoothing is a special case of the broader general process of filtering.
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The Subtropical Jet Stream of Winter.

TL;DR: In this paper, the sub-tropical jet-stream core is estimated to have a maximum speed close to 70 m per sec in the mean integrated around the world; this is mainly due to very high speeds over Africa and Asia.
Journal ArticleDOI

The NMC Operational Global Data Assimilation System

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a global data assimilation system developed at the National Meteorological Center for treating the heterogeneous global data base based on updating a nine-level primitive equation prediction model by a local, multivariate, three-dimensional, statistical interpolation method.
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