Abstract
The seasonal (wintertime) development of middle atmosphere circulation in opposite phases of the equatorial quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) was simulated with a three-dimensional nonlinear numerical model. In the stratosphere, the effect of equatorial QBO was generally consistent with the extratropical QBO observed by Holton and Tan, namely, a stronger midwinter polar vortex in the westerly phase, and vice versa. However, the extratropical response to the QBO was sensitive to other factors such as mesospheric gravity wave drag and the amplitude of Rossby waves specified at the model's lower boundary. The extratropical QBO was realistic only when a drag parameterization was included and Rossby wave amplitudes lay in an intermediate range close to the observed. The model's sensitivity to forcing was most apparent in perpetual solstice runs without parameterized wave drag. Seasonal integrations with wave drag produced a more realistic extratropical QBO, making the bifurcation less conspicuous. -from Authors
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CITATION STYLE
O’Sullivan, D., & Dunkerton, T. J. (1994). Seasonal development of the extratropical QBO in a numerical model of the middle atmosphere. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 51(24), 3706–3721. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1994)051<3706:SDOTEQ>2.0.CO;2
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