An equatorial beta-plane model of the middle atmosphere is used to analytically examine the effects of radiative cooling and ozone heating on the spatial and temporal evolution of the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO). Under the assumption that the diabatic heating is weak and the background fields of wind, temperature, and ozone are slowly varying, a perturbation analysis yields expressions describing the vertical spatial modulation of Kelvin and Rossby-gravity waves in the presence of ozone. These expressions show that wave-induced changes in the diabatic heating arising from the advection of basic-state ozone reduce the local radiative damping rate by up to 15% below 35 km. In a one-dimensional model of the QBO, eddy ozone heating increases the amplitude of the zonal wind QBO by 1-2 m s-1 and increases the oscillation period by about two months. The significance of these results to the observed QBO is discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Cordero, E. C., Nathan, T. R., & Echols, R. S. (1998). An analytical study of ozone feedbacks on Kelvin and Rossby-gravity waves: Effects on the QBO. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 55(6), 1051–1062. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1998)055<1051:AASOOF>2.0.CO;2
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