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91探花
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Tim Woollings

Professor of Physical Climate Science

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Climate dynamics
Tim.Woollings@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)82427
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 203
  • About
  • Publications

A new Rossby wave-breaking interpretation of the North Atlantic Oscillation

Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 65:2 (2008) 609-626

Authors:

TJ Woollings, B Hoskins, M Blackburn, P Berrisford

Abstract:

This paper proposes the hypothesis that the low-frequency variability of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) arises as a result of variations in the occurrence of upper-level Rossby wave-breaking events over the North Atlantic. These events lead to synoptic situations similar to midlatitude blocking that are referred to as high-latitude blocking episodes. A positive NAO is envisaged as being a description of periods in which these episodes are infrequent and can be considered as a basic, unblocked situation. A negative NAO is a description of periods in which episodes occur frequently. A similar, but weaker, relationship exists between wave breaking over the Pacific and the west Pacific pattern. Evidence is given to 91探花 this hypothesis by using a two-dimensional potential-vorticity-based index to identify wave breaking at various latitudes. This is applied to Northern Hemisphere winter data from the 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA-40), and the events identified are then related to the NAO. Certain dynamical precursors are identified that appear to increase the likelihood of wave breaking. These suggest mechanisms by which variability in the tropical Pacific, and in the stratosphere, could affect the NAO. 漏 2008 American Meteorological Society.

Atmospheric blocking and patterns of low-frequency variability arising from the breaking of upper level rossby waves

87th AMS Annual Meeting (2007)

Authors:

TJ Woollings, BJ Hoskins, M Blackburn

The answer is blowing in the wind

Planet Earth (2007) 28-29

Abstract:

The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is a natural climate variability and can be attributed to the UK warming in average winter temperature. Being responsible for both the strength and orientation of the Atlantic jetstream, the NAO is associated with the storm track beneath the jetstream. Changes in NAO is associated with large-scale waves that break in the upper atmosphere. The air waves which stretch for a few thousand kilometers, have some peaks and troughs and when distorted, becomes distorted and collapses into a very turbulent flow.

Entropy sources in a dynamical core atmosphere model

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 132:614 (2006) 43-59

Authors:

Tim Woollings, John Thuburn

Vertical discretizations for compressible Euler equation atmospheric models giving optimal representation of normal modes

Journal of Computational Physics 203:2 (2005) 386-404

Authors:

J Thuburn, TJ Woollings

Abstract:

Accurate representation of different kinds of wave motion is essential for numerical models of the atmosphere, but is sensitive to details of the discretization. In this paper, numerical dispersion relations are computed for different vertical discretizations of the compressible Euler equations and compared with the analytical dispersion relation. A height coordinate, an isentropic coordinate, and a terrain-following mass-based coordinate are considered, and, for each of these, different choices of prognostic variables and grid staggerings are considered. The discretizations are categorized according to whether their dispersion relations are optimal, are near optimal, have a single zero-frequency computational mode, or are problematic in other ways. Some general understanding of the factors that affect the numerical dispersion properties is obtained: heuristic arguments concerning the normal mode structures, and the amount of averaging and coarse differencing in the finite difference scheme, are shown to be useful guides to which configurations will be optimal; the number of degrees of freedom in the discretization is shown to be an accurate guide to the existence of computational modes; there is only minor sensitivity to whether the equations for thermodynamic variables are discretized in advective form or flux form; and an accurate representation of acoustic modes is found to be a prerequisite for accurate representation of inertia-gravity modes, which, in turn, is found to be a prerequisite for accurate representation of Rossby modes. 漏 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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