A connection is found between African easterly waves (AEWs), equatorial westward-moving mixed Rossby-gravity (WMRG) waves, and equivalent barotropic Rossby waves (RWs) from the Southern Hemisphere (SH). The amplitude and phase of equatorial waves is calculated by projection of broadband-filtered ERA-Interim data onto a horizontal structure basis obtained from equatorial wave theory. Mechanisms enabling interaction between the wave types are identified. AEWs are dominated by a vorticity wave that tilts eastward below the African easterly jet and westward above: the tilt necessary for baroclinic wave growth. However, a strong relationship is identified between amplifying vorticity centers within AEWs and equatorial WMRG waves. Although the waves do not phase lock, positive vorticity centers amplify whenever the cross-equatorial motion of the WMRG wave lies at the same longitude in the upper troposphere (southward flow) and east of this in the lower troposphere (northward flow). Two mechanisms could explain the vorticity amplification: vortex stretching below the upper-tropospheric divergence and ascent associated with latent heating in convection in the lower-tropospheric moist northward flow.
CITATION STYLE
Yang, G. Y., Methven, J., Woolnough, S., Hodges, K., & Hoskins, B. (2018). Linking African easterly wave activity with equatorial waves and the influence of rossby waves from the Southern Hemisphere. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 75(6), 1783–1809. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-17-0184.1
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