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Omega equation

The omega equation is a culminating result in synoptic-scale meteorology. It is an elliptic partial differential equation, named because its left-hand side produces an estimate of vertical velocity, customarily[1] expressed by symbol , in a pressure coordinate measuring height the atmosphere. Mathematically, , where represents a material derivative. The underlying concept is more general, however, and can also be applied[2] to the Boussinesq fluid equation system where vertical velocity is in altitude coordinate z.

Concept and summary edit

Vertical wind is crucial to weather and storms of all types. Even slow, broad updrafts can create convective instability or bring air to its lifted condensation level creating stratiform cloud decks. Unfortunately, predicting vertical motion directly is difficult. For synoptic scales in Earth's broad and shallow troposphere, the vertical component of Newton's law of motion is sacrificed in meteorology's primitive equations, by accepting the hydrostatic approximation. Instead, vertical velocity must be solved through its link to horizontal laws of motion, via the mass continuity equation. But this presents further difficulties, because horizontal winds are mostly geostrophic, to a good approximation. Geostrophic winds merely circulate horizontally, and do not significantly converge or diverge in the horizontal to provide the needed link to mass continuity and thus vertical motion.

The key insight embodied by the quasi-geostrophic omega equation is that thermal wind balance (the combination of hydrostatic and geostrophic force balances above) holds throughout time, even though the horizontal transport of momentum and heat by geostrophic winds will often tend to destroy that balance. Logically, then, a small non-geostrophic component of the wind (one which is divergent, and thus connected to vertical motion) must be acting as a secondary circulation to maintain balance of the geostrophic primary circulation. The quasi-geostrophic omega   is the hypothetical vertical motion whose adiabatic cooling or warming effect (based on the atmosphere's static stability) would prevent thermal wind imbalance from growing with time, by countering the balance-destroying (or imbalance-creating) effects of advection. Strictly speaking, QG theory approximates both the advected momentum and the advecting velocity as given by the geostrophic wind.

In summary, one may consider the vertical velocity that results from solving the omega equation as that which would be needed to maintain geostrophy and hydrostasy in the face of advection by the geostrophic wind.[1]

The equation reads:

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

where   is the Coriolis parameter,   is related to the static stability,   is the geostrophic velocity vector,   is the geostrophic relative vorticity,   is the geopotential,   is the horizontal Laplacian operator and   is the horizontal del operator.[3] Its sign and sense in typical weather applications[4] is: upward motion is produced by positive vorticity advection above the level in question (the first term), plus warm advection (the second term).

Derivation edit

The derivation of the   equation is based on the vertical component of the vorticity equation, and the thermodynamic equation. The vertical vorticity equation for a frictionless atmosphere may be written using pressure as the vertical coordinate:

 

 

 

 

 

(2)

Here   is the relative vorticity,   the horizontal wind velocity vector, whose components in the   and   directions are   and   respectively,   the absolute vorticity  ,   is the Coriolis parameter,   the material derivative of pressure  ,   is the unit vertical vector,   is the isobaric Del (grad) operator,   is the vertical advection of vorticity and   represents the "tilting" term or transformation of horizontal vorticity into vertical vorticity.[5]

The thermodynamic equation may be written as:

 

 

 

 

 

(3)

where  , in which   is the heating rate (supply of energy per unit time and unit mass),  is the specific heat of dry air,   is the gas constant for dry air,   is the potential temperature and   is geopotential  .

The   equation (1) is obtained from equation (2) and (3) by casting both equations in terms of geopotential Z, and eliminating time derivatives based on the physical assumption that thermal wind imbalance remains small across time, or d/dt(imbalance) = 0. For the first step, the relative vorticity must be approximated as the geostrophic vorticity:

 

Expanding the final "tilting" term in (2) into Cartesian coordinates (although we will soon neglect it), the vorticity equation reads:

 

 

 

 

 

(4)

Differentiating (4) with respect to   gives:

 

 

 

 

 

(5)

Taking the Laplacian ( ) of (3) gives:

 

 

 

 

 

(6)

Adding (5) to g/f times (6), substituting  , and approximating horizontal advection with geostrophic advection (using the Jacobian formalism) gives:

 

 

 

 

 

(7)

Equation (7) is now a diagnostic, linear differential equation for  , which can be split into two terms, namely   and  , such that:

 

 

 

 

 

(8)

and

 

 

 

 

 

(9)

where   is the vertical velocity attributable to all the flow-dependent advective tendencies in Equation (8), and   is the vertical velocity due to the non-adiabatic heating, which includes the latent heat of condensation, sensible heat fluxes, radiative heating, etc. (Singh & Rathor, 1974). Since all advecting velocities in the horizontal have been replaced with geostrophic values, and geostrophic winds are nearly nondivergent, neglect of vertical advection terms is a consistent further assumption of the quasi-geostrophic set, leaving only the square bracketed term in Eqs. (7-8) to enter (1).

Interpretation edit

Equation (1) for adiabatic   is used by meteorologists and operational weather forecasters to anticipate where upward motion will occur on synoptic charts. For sinusoidal or wavelike motions, where Laplacian operators act simply as a negative sign,[4] and the equation's meaning can be expressed with words indicating the sign of the effect: Upward motion is driven by positive vorticity advection increasing with height (or PVA for short), plus warm air advection (or WAA for short). The opposite signed case is logically opposite, for this linear equation.

In a location where the imbalancing effects of adiabatic advection are acting to drive upward motion (where   in Eq. 1), the inertia of the geostrophic wind field (that is, its propensity to carry on forward) is creating a demand for decreasing thickness   in order for thermal wind balance to continue to hold. For instance, when there is an approaching upper-level cyclone or trough above the level in question, the part of   attributable to the first term in Eq. 1 is upward motion needed to create the increasingly cool air column that is required hypsometrically under the falling heights. That adiabatic reasoning must be supplemented by an appreciation of feedbacks from flow-dependent heating, such as latent heat release. If latent heat is released as air cools, then an additional upward motion will be required based on Eq. (9) to counteract its effect, in order to still create the necessary cool core. Another way to think about such a feedback is to consider an effective static stability that is smaller in saturated air than in unsaturated air, although a complication of that view is that latent heating mediated by convection need not be vertically local to the altitude where cooling by   triggers its formation. For this reason, retaining a separate Q term like Equation (9) is a useful approach.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Holton, James (2004). An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology. Elsevier Academic Press. ISBN 0123540151.
  2. ^ Davies, Huw (2015). "The Quasigeostrophic Omega Equation: Reappraisal, Refinements, and Relevance". Monthly Weather Review. 143 (1): 3–25. Bibcode:2015MWRv..143....3D. doi:10.1175/MWR-D-14-00098.1.
  3. ^ Holton, J.R., 1992, An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology Academic Press, 166-175
  4. ^ a b "Quasi-Geostrophic Omega Equation Lab". METEd, CoMET program. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
  5. ^ Singh & Rathor, 1974, Reduction of the Complete Omega Equation to the Simplest Form, Pure and Applied Geophysics, 112, 219-223
  6. ^ Nie, Ji; Fan, Bowen (2019-06-19). "Roles of Dynamic Forcings and Diabatic Heating in Summer Extreme Precipitation in East China and the Southeastern United States". Journal of Climate. 32 (18): 5815–5831. Bibcode:2019JCli...32.5815N. doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0188.1. ISSN 0894-8755.

External links edit

  • American Meteorological Society definition

omega, equation, omega, equation, culminating, result, synoptic, scale, meteorology, elliptic, partial, differential, equation, named, because, left, hand, side, produces, estimate, vertical, velocity, customarily, expressed, symbol, displaystyle, omega, press. The omega equation is a culminating result in synoptic scale meteorology It is an elliptic partial differential equation named because its left hand side produces an estimate of vertical velocity customarily 1 expressed by symbol w displaystyle omega in a pressure coordinate measuring height the atmosphere Mathematically w d p d t displaystyle omega frac dp dt where d d t displaystyle d over dt represents a material derivative The underlying concept is more general however and can also be applied 2 to the Boussinesq fluid equation system where vertical velocity is w d z d t displaystyle w frac dz dt in altitude coordinate z Contents 1 Concept and summary 2 Derivation 3 Interpretation 4 References 5 External linksConcept and summary editVertical wind is crucial to weather and storms of all types Even slow broad updrafts can create convective instability or bring air to its lifted condensation level creating stratiform cloud decks Unfortunately predicting vertical motion directly is difficult For synoptic scales in Earth s broad and shallow troposphere the vertical component of Newton s law of motion is sacrificed in meteorology s primitive equations by accepting the hydrostatic approximation Instead vertical velocity must be solved through its link to horizontal laws of motion via the mass continuity equation But this presents further difficulties because horizontal winds are mostly geostrophic to a good approximation Geostrophic winds merely circulate horizontally and do not significantly converge or diverge in the horizontal to provide the needed link to mass continuity and thus vertical motion The key insight embodied by the quasi geostrophic omega equation is that thermal wind balance the combination of hydrostatic and geostrophic force balances above holds throughout time even though the horizontal transport of momentum and heat by geostrophic winds will often tend to destroy that balance Logically then a small non geostrophic component of the wind one which is divergent and thus connected to vertical motion must be acting as a secondary circulation to maintain balance of the geostrophic primary circulation The quasi geostrophic omega w Q G displaystyle omega QG nbsp is the hypothetical vertical motion whose adiabatic cooling or warming effect based on the atmosphere s static stability would prevent thermal wind imbalance from growing with time by countering the balance destroying or imbalance creating effects of advection Strictly speaking QG theory approximates both the advected momentum and the advecting velocity as given by the geostrophic wind In summary one may consider the vertical velocity that results from solving the omega equation as that which would be needed to maintain geostrophy and hydrostasy in the face of advection by the geostrophic wind 1 The equation reads s H 2 w f 2 2 w p 2 f p V g H z g f H 2 V g H ϕ p displaystyle sigma nabla text H 2 omega f 2 frac partial 2 omega partial p 2 f frac partial partial p left mathbf V text g cdot nabla text H left zeta text g f right right nabla text H 2 left mathbf V text g cdot nabla text H frac partial phi partial p right nbsp 1 where f displaystyle f nbsp is the Coriolis parameter s displaystyle sigma nbsp is related to the static stability V g displaystyle mathbf V text g nbsp is the geostrophic velocity vector z g displaystyle zeta text g nbsp is the geostrophic relative vorticity ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is the geopotential H 2 displaystyle nabla text H 2 nbsp is the horizontal Laplacian operator and H displaystyle nabla text H nbsp is the horizontal del operator 3 Its sign and sense in typical weather applications 4 is upward motion is produced by positive vorticity advection above the level in question the first term plus warm advection the second term Derivation editThe derivation of the w displaystyle omega nbsp equation is based on the vertical component of the vorticity equation and the thermodynamic equation The vertical vorticity equation for a frictionless atmosphere may be written using pressure as the vertical coordinate 3 t V h f w p 3 w p w 3 p k w V p displaystyle frac partial xi partial t V cdot nabla eta f frac partial omega partial p left xi frac partial omega partial p omega frac partial xi partial p right hat k cdot nabla omega times frac partial V partial p nbsp 2 Here 3 displaystyle xi nbsp is the relative vorticity V displaystyle V nbsp the horizontal wind velocity vector whose components in the x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp directions are u displaystyle u nbsp and v displaystyle v nbsp respectively h displaystyle eta nbsp the absolute vorticity 3 f displaystyle xi f nbsp f displaystyle f nbsp is the Coriolis parameter w d p d t displaystyle omega frac dp dt nbsp the material derivative of pressure p displaystyle p nbsp k displaystyle hat k nbsp is the unit vertical vector displaystyle nabla nbsp is the isobaric Del grad operator 3 w p w 3 p displaystyle left xi frac partial omega partial p omega frac partial xi partial p right nbsp is the vertical advection of vorticity and k w V p displaystyle hat k cdot nabla omega times frac partial V partial p nbsp represents the tilting term or transformation of horizontal vorticity into vertical vorticity 5 The thermodynamic equation may be written as t Z p V Z p k w R C p g Q p displaystyle frac partial partial t left frac partial Z partial p right V cdot nabla left frac partial Z partial p right k omega frac R C text p cdot g cdot frac Q p nbsp 3 where k Z p p ln 8 displaystyle k equiv left frac partial Z partial p right frac partial partial p ln theta nbsp in which Q displaystyle Q nbsp is the heating rate supply of energy per unit time and unit mass C p displaystyle C text p nbsp is the specific heat of dry air R displaystyle R nbsp is the gas constant for dry air 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is the potential temperature and ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is geopotential g Z displaystyle gZ nbsp The w displaystyle omega nbsp equation 1 is obtained from equation 2 and 3 by casting both equations in terms of geopotential Z and eliminating time derivatives based on the physical assumption that thermal wind imbalance remains small across time or d dt imbalance 0 For the first step the relative vorticity must be approximated as the geostrophic vorticity 3 g f 2 Z displaystyle xi frac g f nabla 2 Z nbsp Expanding the final tilting term in 2 into Cartesian coordinates although we will soon neglect it the vorticity equation reads t g f 2 Z V h f w p 3 w p w 3 p w y u p w x v p displaystyle frac partial partial t left frac g f nabla 2 Z right V cdot nabla eta f frac partial omega partial p left xi frac partial omega partial p omega frac partial xi partial p right left frac partial omega partial y frac partial u partial p frac partial omega partial x frac partial v partial p right nbsp 4 Differentiating 4 with respect to p displaystyle p nbsp gives g f t 2 Z p p V h f 2 w p 2 p 3 w p w 3 p p w y u p w x v p displaystyle frac g f frac partial partial t nabla 2 left frac partial Z partial p right frac partial partial p V cdot nabla eta f frac partial 2 omega partial p 2 frac partial partial p left xi frac partial omega partial p omega frac partial xi partial p right frac partial partial p left frac partial omega partial y cdot frac partial u partial p frac partial omega partial x cdot frac partial v partial p right nbsp 5 Taking the Laplacian 2 displaystyle nabla 2 nbsp of 3 gives t 2 Z p 2 V Z p 2 k w R C p g 2 Q p displaystyle frac partial partial t nabla 2 left frac partial Z partial p right nabla 2 V cdot nabla left frac partial Z partial p right nabla 2 k omega frac R C text p cdot g cdot frac nabla 2 Q p nbsp 6 Adding 5 to g f times 6 substituting g k s displaystyle gk sigma nbsp and approximating horizontal advection with geostrophic advection using the Jacobian formalism gives 2 w f 2 s 2 w p 2 1 s p J ϕ h 1 f 2 J ϕ ϕ p f s p w y u p w x v p f s p 3 w p w 3 p R 2 Q C p S p displaystyle nabla 2 omega frac f 2 sigma frac partial 2 omega partial p 2 frac 1 sigma left frac partial partial p J phi eta frac 1 f nabla 2 J left phi frac partial phi partial p right right frac f sigma frac partial partial p left frac partial omega partial y cdot frac partial u partial p frac partial omega partial x cdot frac partial v partial p right frac f sigma frac partial partial p left xi frac partial omega partial p omega frac partial xi partial p right frac R cdot nabla 2 Q C text p cdot S cdot p nbsp 7 Equation 7 is now a diagnostic linear differential equation for w displaystyle omega nbsp which can be split into two terms namely w 1 displaystyle omega 1 nbsp and w 2 displaystyle omega 2 nbsp such that 2 w 1 f 2 s 2 w 1 p 2 1 s p J ϕ h 1 f 2 J ϕ ϕ p f s p w y u p w x v p f s p 3 w p w 3 p displaystyle nabla 2 omega 1 frac f 2 sigma frac partial 2 omega 1 partial p 2 frac 1 sigma left frac partial partial p J phi eta frac 1 f nabla 2 J left phi frac partial phi partial p right right frac f sigma frac partial partial p left frac partial omega partial y cdot frac partial u partial p frac partial omega partial x cdot frac partial v partial p right frac f sigma frac partial partial p left xi frac partial omega partial p omega frac partial xi partial p right nbsp 8 and 2 w 2 f 2 s 2 w 2 p 2 R 2 Q C p s p displaystyle nabla 2 omega 2 frac f 2 sigma frac partial 2 omega 2 partial p 2 frac R cdot nabla 2 Q C text p cdot sigma cdot p nbsp 9 where w 1 displaystyle omega 1 nbsp is the vertical velocity attributable to all the flow dependent advective tendencies in Equation 8 and w 2 displaystyle omega 2 nbsp is the vertical velocity due to the non adiabatic heating which includes the latent heat of condensation sensible heat fluxes radiative heating etc Singh amp Rathor 1974 Since all advecting velocities in the horizontal have been replaced with geostrophic values and geostrophic winds are nearly nondivergent neglect of vertical advection terms is a consistent further assumption of the quasi geostrophic set leaving only the square bracketed term in Eqs 7 8 to enter 1 Interpretation editEquation 1 for adiabatic w Q G displaystyle omega QG nbsp is used by meteorologists and operational weather forecasters to anticipate where upward motion will occur on synoptic charts For sinusoidal or wavelike motions where Laplacian operators act simply as a negative sign 4 and the equation s meaning can be expressed with words indicating the sign of the effect Upward motion is driven by positive vorticity advection increasing with height or PVA for short plus warm air advection or WAA for short The opposite signed case is logically opposite for this linear equation In a location where the imbalancing effects of adiabatic advection are acting to drive upward motion where w Q G lt 0 displaystyle omega QG lt 0 nbsp in Eq 1 the inertia of the geostrophic wind field that is its propensity to carry on forward is creating a demand for decreasing thickness Z p displaystyle frac partial Z partial p nbsp in order for thermal wind balance to continue to hold For instance when there is an approaching upper level cyclone or trough above the level in question the part of w Q G displaystyle omega QG nbsp attributable to the first term in Eq 1 is upward motion needed to create the increasingly cool air column that is required hypsometrically under the falling heights That adiabatic reasoning must be supplemented by an appreciation of feedbacks from flow dependent heating such as latent heat release If latent heat is released as air cools then an additional upward motion will be required based on Eq 9 to counteract its effect in order to still create the necessary cool core Another way to think about such a feedback is to consider an effective static stability that is smaller in saturated air than in unsaturated air although a complication of that view is that latent heating mediated by convection need not be vertically local to the altitude where cooling by w Q G displaystyle omega QG nbsp triggers its formation For this reason retaining a separate Q term like Equation 9 is a useful approach 6 References edit a b Holton James 2004 An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology Elsevier Academic Press ISBN 0123540151 Davies Huw 2015 The Quasigeostrophic Omega Equation Reappraisal Refinements and Relevance Monthly Weather Review 143 1 3 25 Bibcode 2015MWRv 143 3D doi 10 1175 MWR D 14 00098 1 Holton J R 1992 An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology Academic Press 166 175 a b Quasi Geostrophic Omega Equation Lab METEd CoMET program Retrieved 10 November 2019 Singh amp Rathor 1974 Reduction of the Complete Omega Equation to the Simplest Form Pure and Applied Geophysics 112 219 223 Nie Ji Fan Bowen 2019 06 19 Roles of Dynamic Forcings and Diabatic Heating in Summer Extreme Precipitation in East China and the Southeastern United States Journal of Climate 32 18 5815 5831 Bibcode 2019JCli 32 5815N doi 10 1175 JCLI D 19 0188 1 ISSN 0894 8755 External links editAmerican Meteorological Society definition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Omega equation amp oldid 1195703688, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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