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Given that middle latitude weather systems transport heat in a manner such as to weaken the baroclinicity that is thought to be crucial to their growth, it is perhaps surprising that concentrated regions of such eddy activity, i.e. storm-tracks, are found in the Northern Hemisphere winter. The existence and possible self-maintenance of storm-tracks is investigated using a linear, stationary wave model with storm-track region forcings taken from data averaged over a number of winters. It is found that the direct thermal effect of the eddies does indeed act against the existence of the storm-track. Their vorticity fluxes lead to some reduction of this effect. It is argued that the mean diabatic heating in the storm-track region is an indirect eddy effect. This heating is found to maintain the mean maximum in baroclinicity in the region. Further, the mean low-level flow induced by the eddy effects is such as to enhance the warm western oceanic boundary currents that are crucial to the existence of the storm-tracks. The extent to which the Northern Hemisphere storm-tracks can be considered self-maintaining is discussed.
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Brian J. Hoskins
Paul J. Valdes
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
University of Reading
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Hoskins et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8205b05ee2ba81dbef23a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1990)047<1854:oteost>2.0.co;2