Abstract
The existence of boundary baroclinic instability (as exemplified by the Eady or Charney problems) and internal baroclinic instability, which requires the potential vorticity gradient to take both signs in the fluid interior, is unified by regarding the boundary temperature gradients in the external problem as equivalent to infinitely thin sheets of non-zero potential vorticity gradient. It is shown that this analogy can be generalized from the quasi-geostrophic to the primitive equation systems. The linear instability problem on the sphere is examined using the primitive equations; the results are consistent with those of simple conceptual models where potential vorticity gradients are concentrated in thin sheets. The normal modes are integrated into the nonlinear regime, and it is shown that the low-level potential vorticity gradients evolve in a similar way to the surface temperature fields in the lifecycles of external modes. Frontal structures are absent, though the enstrophy cascade produces narrow, elongated low-level features around the time of maximum wave activity. Finally, a lifecycle for a boundary unstable flow is compared with that for an initial flow.-from Authors
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CITATION STYLE
James, I. N., & Hoskins, B. J. (1985). Some comparisons of atmospheric internal and boundary baroclinic instability. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 42(20), 2142–2155. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1985)042<2142:SCOAIA>2.0.CO;2
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