Lau, N-C., and K-M. Lau, 1984: The structure and energetics of midlatitude disturbances accompanying cold-air outbreaks over East Asia. Monthly Weather Review, 112 (7), 1309-27.
Abstract: The onset dates for 11 individual cold-air outbreaks over the East Asian
seaboard during the Winter Monsoon Experiment (1 December 1978-28 February
1979) are used for constructing composite synoptic charts. The three-dimensional
structure and energetics of disturbances with time scales shorter than ~
5 days are distinguished from the corresponding properties of more slowly
varying fluctuations by using time-filtering techniques.
It is seen that the high-frequency disturbances accompanying the cold surges
experience systematic structural changes as they migrate along a well-defined
storm track from East Asia to the Gulf of Alaska. The typical life cycle
of such extratropical storms is characterized by a baroclinic growth phase
coinciding with the polar outbreaks, and a decay phase in which barotropic
processes play an active role. The propagation of low-frequency fluctuations
is oriented toward lower latitudes, with new vorticity centers developing
downstream and equatorward of the primary disturbances associated with the
outbreaks. The shapes of the disturbances appearing in the composite charts
indicate that a strong degree of anisotropy exists in both the high-frequency
and low-frequency disturbances. The fluctuations with short time scales
are elongated in the meridional direction, whereas those with long time
scales are elongated in the zonal direction.
The findings of this composite study are seen to be consistent with circulation
statistics derived from continuous climatological records. The behavior
of the fluctuations with short and long time scales is also reminiscent
of the characteristics of baroclinically unstable waves and Rossby-wave
trains, respectively, appearing in model expreriments.