Observations of Equatorial Kelvin Waves and their Convective Coupling with the Atmosphere/Ocean Surface Layer
ORAL
Abstract
Intraseasonal disturbances with their genesis in the equatorial Indian Ocean (IO) are an important component of global climate. The disturbances, which include Madden-Julian Oscillation and equatorial Kelvin and Rossby waves in the atmosphere and ocean, carry energy which affects El Ni\~{n}o, cyclogenesis, and monsoons. A recent field experiment in IO (\underline {ASIRI-RAWI}) observed disturbances at three sites across IO with arrays of instruments probing from surface layer to lower stratosphere. During the field campaign the most pronounced planetary-scale disturbances were Kelvin waves in tropical tropopause layer. In Seychelles, quasi-biweekly westerly wind bursts were documented and linked to the Kelvin waves aloft, which breakdown in the upper troposphere due to internal shear instabilities. Convective coupling between waves' phase in upper troposphere and surface initiates rapid (turbulent) vertical transport and resultant wind bursts at surface. Such phenomena reveal linkages between planetary-scale waves and small-scale turbulence in the surface layer that can affect air-sea property exchanges and should be parameterized in atmosphere-ocean general circulation models.
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Authors
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Patrick Conry
University of Notre Dame
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H. J. S. Fernando
University of Notre Dame
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Laura Leo
University of Notre Dame
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Byron Blomquist
University of Notre Dame
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Vincent Amelie
Seychelles Meteorological Authority
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Nelson Lalande
Seychelles Meteorological Authority
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Ed Creegan
US Army Research Laboratory
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Chris Hocut
US Army Research Laboratory
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Ben MacCall
US Army Research Laboratory
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Yansen Wang
US Army Research Laboratory
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S. U. P. Jinadasa
National Aquatic Resources Research and Development Agency
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Chien Wang
Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology
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Lik-Khian Yeo
Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology