Annales Geophysicae (Jun 2011)

Instability of combined gravity-inertial-Rossby waves in atmospheres and oceans

  • J. F. McKenzie,
  • J. F. McKenzie,
  • J. F. McKenzie,
  • J. F. McKenzie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-29-997-2011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
pp. 997 – 1003

Abstract

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The properties of the instability of combined gravity-inertial-Rossby waves on a β-plane are investigated. The wave-energy exchange equation shows that there is an exchange of energy with the background stratified medium. The energy source driving the instability lies in the background enthalpy released by the gravitational buoyancy force. It is shown that if the phase speed of the westward propagating low frequency-long wavelength Rossby wave exceeds the Poincaré-Kelvin (or "equivalent" shallow water) wave speed, instability arises from the merging of Rossby and Poincaré modes. There are two key parameters in this instability condition; namely, the equatorial/rotational Mach (or Froude) number M and the latitude θ0 of the β-plane. In general waves equatorward of a critical latitude for given M can be driven unstable, with corresponding growth rates of the order of a day or so. Although these conclusions may only be safely drawn for short wavelengths corresponding to a JWKB wave packet propagating internally and located far from boundaries, nevertheless such a local instability may play a significant role in atmosphere-ocean dynamics.