Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
The analytical theories of barotropic and baroclinic development are first briefly reviewed. The results of a computer model investigation of the phenomenon of downstream development in midlatitudes are then presented and these are extended, using a highly simplified model, to developments in the monsoon upper easterlies. The results suggest that this could be a mechanism contributing to the development of monsoon depressions.
Introduction
The purpose of this contribution is two-fold. Firstly, to stress the importance and value of simple model experiments in the development of atmospheric dynamics. Modern computers present us with the opportunity of using numerical methods to extend dynamical theory to the study of much more realistic phenomena than was previously possible using purely analytical methods. Secondly, some results of a preliminary investigation of the phenomenon of downstream development are presented. This investigation has yielded interesting results in the study of midlatitude systems and, by using a simple model, it is possible to draw some preliminary conclusions concerning its possible importance as a primary mechanism in the development of some monsoon depressions. A suggestion that this might be the case was recently made by Krishnamurti et al. (1977).
The analytical theories of barotropic and baroclinic development are first briefly reviewed and a simple numerical model capable of simulating the latter process is described. This is validated using the results of exact analysis.
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