17th Conference on Atmospheric and Oceanic Fluid Dynamics

3.2

A baroclinic turbulence closure

Petros J. Ioannou, Univ. of Athens, Athens, Greece; and B. Farrell

The two-layer model is an analytically and computationally simple system in which the dynamics of turbulence can be conveniently studied. In this talk a maximally simplified model of the statistically steady turbulent state in this system will be presented in order to isolate and identify the essential mechanism of turbulence. In this minimally complex turbulence model the effects of nonlinearity are parameterized using an energetically consistent stochastic process that is white in both space and time, turbulent fluxes are obtained using a Stochastic Turbulence Model (STM), and statistically steady turbulent states are identified using Stochastic Structural Stability Theory (SSST). These turbulent states are the fixed point equilibria of the nonlinear SSST system. For parameter values typical of the midlatitude atmosphere these equilibria predict the emergence of marginally stable eddy driven baroclinic jets. The associated eddy variances and fluxes associated with these jets and the power law scaling of eddy variances and fluxes are consistent with observations and simulations of baroclinic turbulence. This optimally simple model isolates the essential physics of baroclinic turbulence: maintenance of variance by transient perturbation growth, replenishment of the transiently growing subspace by nonlinear energetically conservative eddy/eddy scattering, and equilibration to a statistically steady state of marginal stability by a combination of nonlinear eddy induced mean jet modification and eddy dissipation.

wrf recording  Recorded presentation

Session 3, Atmospheric and Oceanic Fluid Dynamics Theory II
Monday, 8 June 2009, 1:50 PM-3:30 PM, Pinnacle BC

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