Polar vortex: Difference between revisions
From Glossary of Meteorology
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<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">A planetary-scale mid- to high-latitude circumpolar [[cyclonic circulation]], extending from the middle [[troposphere]] to the [[stratosphere]]. The Northern Hemisphere [[vortex]] often features two centers—one near Baffin Island and the other over northeast Siberia—with analogous circumpolar asymmetry atypical in the Southern Hemisphere. The westerly airflow is largely a manifestation of the [[thermal wind]] above the [[polar frontal zone]] of middle and subpolar latitudes. The vortex is strongest during the winter in the upper troposphere and stratosphere when the pole-to-equator [[temperature]] gradient is strongest. The stratosphere component of the circulation may be referred to separately as the “polar stratospheric vortex.” In summer, the strongest westerly circulation is largely confined to the troposphere, and the polar stratospheric vortex reverses in the upper stratosphere because of solar heating during the polar day.</div><br/> </div> | <div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">A planetary-scale mid- to high-latitude circumpolar [[cyclonic circulation]], extending from the middle [[troposphere]] to the [[stratosphere]]. The Northern Hemisphere [[vortex]] often features two centers—one near Baffin Island and the other over northeast Siberia—with analogous circumpolar asymmetry atypical in the Southern Hemisphere. The westerly airflow is largely a manifestation of the [[thermal wind]] above the [[polar frontal zone]] of middle and subpolar latitudes. The vortex is strongest during the winter in the upper troposphere and stratosphere when the pole-to-equator [[temperature]] gradient is strongest. The stratosphere component of the circulation may be referred to separately as the “polar stratospheric vortex.” In summer, the strongest westerly circulation is largely confined to the troposphere, and the polar stratospheric vortex reverses in the upper stratosphere because of solar heating during the polar day.</div><br/> </div> | ||
Reference: Simmons, A., M. Hortal, G. Kelly, A. McNally, A. Untch, S. Uppala | Reference: Simmons, A., M. Hortal, G. Kelly, A. McNally, A. Untch, and S. Uppala, 2005: ECMWF analyses and forecasts of stratospheric winter polar vortex breakup: September 2002 in the Southern Hemisphere and related events. ''J. Atmos. Sci.'', '''62''', 668–689. [http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/JAS-3322.1] | ||
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Revision as of 11:52, 30 January 2014
polar vortex
A planetary-scale mid- to high-latitude circumpolar cyclonic circulation, extending from the middle troposphere to the stratosphere. The Northern Hemisphere vortex often features two centers—one near Baffin Island and the other over northeast Siberia—with analogous circumpolar asymmetry atypical in the Southern Hemisphere. The westerly airflow is largely a manifestation of the thermal wind above the polar frontal zone of middle and subpolar latitudes. The vortex is strongest during the winter in the upper troposphere and stratosphere when the pole-to-equator temperature gradient is strongest. The stratosphere component of the circulation may be referred to separately as the “polar stratospheric vortex.” In summer, the strongest westerly circulation is largely confined to the troposphere, and the polar stratospheric vortex reverses in the upper stratosphere because of solar heating during the polar day.
Reference: Simmons, A., M. Hortal, G. Kelly, A. McNally, A. Untch, and S. Uppala, 2005: ECMWF analyses and forecasts of stratospheric winter polar vortex breakup: September 2002 in the Southern Hemisphere and related events. J. Atmos. Sci., 62, 668–689. [1]
Term Edited 30 January,2014