Transport and Mixing in the Extratropical Tropopause Region in a High-Vertical-Resolution GCM. Part II: Relative Importance of Large-Scale and Small-Scale Dynamics

  • Kazuyuki Miyazaki
    Research Institute for Global Change, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokohama, Japan
  • Shingo Watanabe
    Research Institute for Global Change, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokohama, Japan
  • Yoshio Kawatani
    Research Institute for Global Change, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokohama, Japan
  • Kaoru Sato
    Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
  • Yoshihiro Tomikawa
    National Institute of Polar Research, Tokyo, Japan
  • Masaaki Takahashi
    Center for Climate System Research, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Japan

書誌事項

公開日
2010-05-01
DOI
  • 10.1175/2009jas3334.1
公開者
American Meteorological Society

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説明

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>The relative roles of atmospheric motions on various scales, from mesoscale to planetary scale, in transport and mixing in the extratropical tropopause region are investigated using a high-vertical-resolution general circulation model (GCM). The GCM with a vertical resolution of about 300 m explicitly represents the propagation and breaking of gravity waves and the induced transport and mixing. A downward control calculation shows that the Eliassen–Palm (E-P) flux of the gravity waves diverges and induces a mean equatorward flow in the extratropical tropopause region, which differs from the mean poleward flow induced by the convergence of large-scale E-P fluxes. The diffusion coefficients estimated from the eddy potential vorticity flux in tropopause-based coordinates reveal that isentropic motions diffuse air between 20 K below and 10 K above the tropopause from late autumn to early spring, while vertical mixing is strongly suppressed at around 10–15 K above the tropopause throughout the year. The isentropic mixing is mainly caused by planetary- and synoptic-scale motions, while small-scale motions with a horizontal scale of less than a few thousand kilometers largely affect the three-dimensional mixing just above the tropopause. Analysis of the gravity wave energy and atmospheric instability implies that the small-scale dynamics associated with the dissipation and saturation of gravity waves is a significant cause of the three-dimensional mixing just above the tropopause. A rapid increase in the static stability in the tropopause inversion layer is considered to play an important role in controlling the gravity wave activity around the tropopause.</jats:p>

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