ATM OCN (Meteorology) 100
PLANETARY SCALE CIRCULATION
(continued)
PART II: THE JET STREAM & THE CIRCUMPOLAR
VORTEX
Summer 2000
Lecture #18 Scheduled for:
13 JUL 2000 (R)
Recommended Readings from Moran and Morgan (1997):
pages 240-243; 234-240.
Objectives:
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To explain the cause of the thermal-wind relation and identify the characteristics.
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To explain why the midlatitude flow aloft is predominantly westerly, with
upper tropospheric jet streams, located over the near surface polar front.
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To identify the thermal distribution and regions of an upper atmospheric
wave.
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To describe the seasonal variation in the circumpolar vortex.
Today's Lecture Outline:
A. INTRODUCTION
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Definition and significance
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Discovery of the Jet Stream
B. ANATOMY OF THE JET STREAM
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Jet Stream Structure
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Types of Major Jet Streams
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Seasonal Variations in Jet Streams
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Reasons for Jet Streams
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The Thermal Wind Relationship
C. WAVES IN THE WESTERLIES
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The Circumpolar Vortex
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Observed Wave Features in The Circumpolar Vortex
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Long Planetary or Rossby Waves
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Seasonal Variations in the Circumpolar Vortex
Last revision 6 June 2000
Produced by Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D.
Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison, WI 53706
hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
URL: aos100/lectures/0018jets.html