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Abstract Atmospheric blocking entails a persistent, anomalous meandering of the jet stream that disrupts the eastward migration of transient eddies in the midlatitudes. Here we analyze a large number of blocking (and blocking-like) events in the Northern Hemisphere winter with the ERA5 reanalysis through the lens of vertically-averaged wave-activity budget. By applying a feature tracking algorithm, large-valued wave-activity anomalies that persist for 4 days or longer at a given location are identified as blocks, and block-centered composites are constructed for the wave-activity budget through the lifecycle of blocks. The identified events share commonly recognized features of blocking. The majority of the persistent events occur in clusters collocated with the quasi-stationary ridge associated with the Atlantic and the Pacific storm track. Frequency of persistent blocks is higher (lower) in regions where the ‘carrying capacity’ of the jet stream is lower (higher). A very low carrying capacity for the transient waves leads to a large population of blocks over Europe. The composite lifecycle of persistent blocks shows that convergence (divergence) of the zonal flux of wave-activity dominates the budget during the onset (decay) phase of the block, while the eddy-induced wind plays a crucial role of suppressing the zonal flux during the maturation period. Our finding broadly supports the ‘traffic jam’ hypothesis of Nakamura and Huang as a common mechanism of block formation, although there is vast diversity in the actual manifestation of individual blocks. It is argued that carrying capacity is suited for estimating blocking probability rather than for making deterministic forecasts of blocking events.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 30, 2026
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Abstract The composite structure of the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) has long been known to feature pronounced Rossby gyres in the subtropical upper troposphere, whose existence can be interpreted as the forced response to convective heating anomalies in the presence of a subtropical westerly jet. The question of interest here is whether these forced gyre circulations have any subsequent effects on divergence patterns in the tropics and the Kelvin-mode component of the MJO. A nonlinear spherical shallow water model is used to investigate how the introduction of different background jet profiles affects the model’s steady-state response to an imposed MJO-like stationary thermal forcing. Results show that a stronger jet leads to a stronger Kelvin-mode response in the tropics up to a critical jet speed, along with stronger divergence anomalies in the vicinity of the forcing. To understand this behavior, additional calculations are performed in which a localized vorticity forcing is imposed in the extratropics, without any thermal forcing in the tropics. The response is once again seen to include pronounced equatorial Kelvin waves, provided the jet is of sufficient amplitude. A detailed analysis of the vorticity budget reveals that the zonal-mean zonal wind shear plays a key role in amplifying the Kelvin-mode divergent winds near the equator, with the effects of nonlinearities being of negligible importance. These results help to explain why the MJO tends to be strongest during boreal winter when the Indo-Pacific jet is typically at its strongest. Significance StatementThe MJO is a planetary-scale convectively coupled equatorial disturbance that serves as a primary source of atmospheric predictability on intraseasonal time scales (30–90 days). Due to its dominance and spontaneous recurrence, the MJO has a significant global impact, influencing hurricanes in the tropics, storm tracks, and atmosphere blocking events in the midlatitudes, and even weather systems near the poles. Despite steady improvements in subseasonal-to-seasonal (S2S) forecast models, the MJO prediction skill has still not reached its maximum potential. The root of this challenge is partly due to our lack of understanding of how the MJO interacts with the background mean flow. In this work, we use a simple one-layer atmospheric model with idealized heating and vorticity sources to understand the impact of the subtropical jet on the MJO amplitude and its horizontal structure.more » « less
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null (Ed.)Abstract The observed zonal-mean extratropical storm tracks exhibit distinct hemispheric seasonality. Previously, the moist static energy (MSE) framework was used diagnostically to show that shortwave absorption (insolation) dominates seasonality but surface heat fluxes damp seasonality in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) and amplify it in the Northern Hemisphere (NH). Here we establish the causal role of surface fluxes (ocean energy storage) by varying the mixed layer depth d in zonally symmetric 1) slab-ocean aquaplanet simulations with zero ocean energy transport and 2) energy balance model (EBM) simulations. Using a scaling analysis we define a critical mixed layer depth dc and hypothesize 1) large mixed layer depths (d > dc) produce surface heat fluxes that are out of phase with shortwave absorption resulting in small storm track seasonality and 2) small mixed layer depths (d < dc) produce surface heat fluxes that are in phase with shortwave absorption resulting in large storm track seasonality. The aquaplanet simulations confirm the large mixed layer depth hypothesis and yield a useful idealization of the SH storm track. However, the small mixed layer depth hypothesis fails to account for the large contribution of the Ferrel cell and atmospheric storage. The small mixed layer limit does not yield a useful idealization of the NH storm track because the seasonality of the Ferrel cell contribution is opposite to the stationary eddy contribution in the NH. Varying the mixed layer depth in an EBM qualitatively supports the aquaplanet results.more » « less
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