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Resolved Gravity Waves in the Extratropical Stratosphere: Effect of Horizontal Resolution Increase from O(10) to O(1) km
by
van Niekerk, Annelize
, Polichtchouk, Inna
, Wedi, Nils
in
Atmosphere
/ Deceleration
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Gravity
/ Gravity waves
/ Mesoscale models
/ Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
/ Momentum
/ Momentum budget
/ Numerical weather prediction/forecasting
/ Orographic effects
/ Parameterization
/ Polar regions
/ Polar vortex
/ Resolution
/ Simulation
/ Southern Hemisphere
/ Stratosphere
/ Stratospheric circulation
/ Vortices
/ Wavelengths
2023
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Resolved Gravity Waves in the Extratropical Stratosphere: Effect of Horizontal Resolution Increase from O(10) to O(1) km
by
van Niekerk, Annelize
, Polichtchouk, Inna
, Wedi, Nils
in
Atmosphere
/ Deceleration
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Gravity
/ Gravity waves
/ Mesoscale models
/ Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
/ Momentum
/ Momentum budget
/ Numerical weather prediction/forecasting
/ Orographic effects
/ Parameterization
/ Polar regions
/ Polar vortex
/ Resolution
/ Simulation
/ Southern Hemisphere
/ Stratosphere
/ Stratospheric circulation
/ Vortices
/ Wavelengths
2023
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Resolved Gravity Waves in the Extratropical Stratosphere: Effect of Horizontal Resolution Increase from O(10) to O(1) km
by
van Niekerk, Annelize
, Polichtchouk, Inna
, Wedi, Nils
in
Atmosphere
/ Deceleration
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Gravity
/ Gravity waves
/ Mesoscale models
/ Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
/ Momentum
/ Momentum budget
/ Numerical weather prediction/forecasting
/ Orographic effects
/ Parameterization
/ Polar regions
/ Polar vortex
/ Resolution
/ Simulation
/ Southern Hemisphere
/ Stratosphere
/ Stratospheric circulation
/ Vortices
/ Wavelengths
2023
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Resolved Gravity Waves in the Extratropical Stratosphere: Effect of Horizontal Resolution Increase from O(10) to O(1) km
Journal Article
Resolved Gravity Waves in the Extratropical Stratosphere: Effect of Horizontal Resolution Increase from O(10) to O(1) km
2023
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Overview
Global ECMWF IFS simulations with horizontal grid spacings of 1, 4, and 9 km are used to assess gravity wave forcing (GWF) in the extratropical stratosphere. Results with important implications for GWF parameterizations at high and intermediate resolutions are presented. A doubling in the zonal-mean resolved GWF is observed when the horizontal resolution is increased from 9 to 1 km. Small-scale gravity waves with horizontal wavelengths < 100 km dominate this increase. Over most regions, excluding the polar night jet in the Antarctic spring, the total (resolved + parameterized) GWF at 9 km (4 km) is underestimated by up to 30% (15%). This implies that the parameterization of GWF is still required at 9 and 4 km horizontal resolutions. Despite the small land area in the Southern Hemisphere (SH), the resolved orographic and nonorographic GWF contribute equally to the total GWF in the SH at 1 km resolution. This is not reflected in the partitioning of the parameterized GWF, which has a significantly larger nonorographic contribution at 9 km. As a result, a zonal-mean momentum budget analysis reveals that the total GWF contributes one-third of SH springtime polar vortex deceleration at 1 km, whereas the contribution is as much as 50% at 9 km. This suggests that a rebalancing of the parameterized nonorographic and orographic GWF is required.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
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