Oort, A. H., and P. H. Chan, 1977: On the role of the Asian monsoon in the angular momentum and kinetic energy balances of the tropics. Pure and Applied Geophysics, 115 (5/6), 1167-1186.
Abstract: The balance conditions of relative angular momentum and time-mean kinetic
energy and their annual variations are studied for the Northern Hemisphere
tropical belt. The belt is divided into two roughly equal size parts, the
monsoon and the extramonsoon regions. The data used consist of all available
daily rawinsonde reports from the world aerological network for the two
5-year periods 1958-63 and 1968-73. In winter, the trade winds in the monsoon
and extramonsoon regions are both sources of westerly relative angular momentum
for the middle latitude circulation. However, it is found that the angular
momentum gained in the extramonsoon region of the Tropics is mostly destroyed
by a net southward flow of mass in that region, and becomes regenerated
in the monsoon region by a net northward flow of mass there. This excess
of angular momentum together with the angular momentum picked up locally
in the monsoon region is almost all exported across its northern boundary.
It is further found that in winter the Tropics are also an important source
of mean kinetic energy for middle latitudes. Again almost all export of
kinetic energy was found to take place across the northern boundary of the
monsoon sector. Most of this energy must be generated through the pressure
gradient term inside the monsoon region itself, the transformation from
transient eddy kinetic energy being very small. The proper evaluation of
the pressure gradient appears to be the main stumbling block in the present
study, preventing us from estimating the generation and thereby, as a residual,
the frictional dissipation in the two regions.
In summer, the extramonsoon region remains a source of angular momentum,
but the monsoon region with its surface westerlies acts as a sink, leading
to a sharp reduction (and even a midsummer reversal) of the export into
middle latitudes. Also the export of mean kinetic energy almost vanishes
in summer, except for a small southward transfer across the equator. The
calculations for two 5-year periods give very similar estimates and thereby
show the reliability of the results.