TY - JOUR
T1 - Diurnal forcing and phase locking of gravity waves in the maritime continent
AU - Ruppert, James H.
AU - Zhang, Fuqing
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments. We gratefully acknowledge funding from National Science Foundation Grant 1712290 and Department of Energy Grant WACCEM subcontracted through PNNL. We also thank Yue (Michael) Ying for providing WRF postprocessing code and Sourav Taraphdar for making model output available to us. We thank Xingchao Chen for insightful discussions on this work. We are very grateful to George Kiladis and an anonymous reviewer for their thoughtful comments on the study, which substantially improved its clarity. Computational resources for this work were provided by the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin. The model output used in this study is archived in TACC storage, and is available for community use upon request. TRMM data were retrieved from https://pmm.nasa.gov/data-access/downloads/trmm, and ERA5 data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service Climate Data Store (https://cds.climate.copernicus.eu/).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - An unfiltered zonal Hovmöller depiction of rainfall in the Maritime Continent (MC) reveals remarkable spatiotemporal continuity of zonally propagating disturbances with a diurnal period, which endure over multiple days and propagate faster than the individual convective storms they coupled with. This phenomenon and its sensitivity to the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) during the 2011/12 Dynamics of the MJO (DYNAMO) field campaign is examined here through a well-validated, convection-permitting model simulation conducted on a large domain. We find that these disturbances are zonally propagating diurnal gravity waves excited by vigorous nocturnal mesoscale convective systems over Sumatra and Borneo. These gravity waves are diurnally phase locked: their wavelength very closely matches the distance between these two islands (;1500 km), while their particular zonal phase speed (;617 m s21) allows them to propagate this distance in one diurnal cycle. We therefore hypothesize that these waves are amplified by resonant interaction due to diurnal phase locking. While these zonal gravity waves decouple from convection once beyond the MC, their divergent flow signature endures well across the Indian Ocean, provoking the notion that they may influence rainfall at far remote locations. The exact controls over this zonal phase speed remain uncertain; we note, however, that it is roughly consistent with diurnal offshore-propagating modes documented previously. Further study is required to tie this down, and more generally, to understand the sensitivity of these modes to background flow strength and the geography of the MC.
AB - An unfiltered zonal Hovmöller depiction of rainfall in the Maritime Continent (MC) reveals remarkable spatiotemporal continuity of zonally propagating disturbances with a diurnal period, which endure over multiple days and propagate faster than the individual convective storms they coupled with. This phenomenon and its sensitivity to the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) during the 2011/12 Dynamics of the MJO (DYNAMO) field campaign is examined here through a well-validated, convection-permitting model simulation conducted on a large domain. We find that these disturbances are zonally propagating diurnal gravity waves excited by vigorous nocturnal mesoscale convective systems over Sumatra and Borneo. These gravity waves are diurnally phase locked: their wavelength very closely matches the distance between these two islands (;1500 km), while their particular zonal phase speed (;617 m s21) allows them to propagate this distance in one diurnal cycle. We therefore hypothesize that these waves are amplified by resonant interaction due to diurnal phase locking. While these zonal gravity waves decouple from convection once beyond the MC, their divergent flow signature endures well across the Indian Ocean, provoking the notion that they may influence rainfall at far remote locations. The exact controls over this zonal phase speed remain uncertain; we note, however, that it is roughly consistent with diurnal offshore-propagating modes documented previously. Further study is required to tie this down, and more generally, to understand the sensitivity of these modes to background flow strength and the geography of the MC.
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U2 - 10.1175/JAS-D-19-0061.1
DO - 10.1175/JAS-D-19-0061.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85075636893
SN - 0022-4928
VL - 76
SP - 2815
EP - 2835
JO - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
JF - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
IS - 9
ER -