35

TRANSIENT EDDIES

25}

0

10

0
0

10+

10

-500

1000
i.

95 |

i

L

-50

20+

L

- 10

,0

U)

-500

°

100

0

| '0

WINTER

9 79

=0

C,

40

2

0

(a)

* 10}

md

5

cD

5

20

-500

5

20

40

C24
a

25}

- 1000

=

STANDING EDDIES

-5

= 1st

0

0

-100

>f

ri

395

“|

20+

0

0

KD a

30 +

WINTER

l

-500°
LL

-250 -100
1

1

iL

0

STANDING AND TRANSIENT EDDIES
-5 0
5

0

winter

20 +
15+
10+
5

=

0

90

A

80

70

6

50

40

30

LATITUDE, DEGREES

2

4

2

10

Fig. 1—Distribution of the components contributing to the conversion
of zonal potential energy to eddy potential energy, ergs/ cm®/sec for a
column 2.5 km deep.

a transfer of potential energy from the mean zonal to the eddy state;
this is the first step in the atmospheric heat engine after the generation by radiative processes. Additional negative values in the higher

latitudes of the stratosphere form a part of the upper-level heat engine.
In middle latitudes in the lower stratosphere there is a refrigerated
region,

and another is evident in the tropics (recently discussed by

Starr and Wallace”), It is evident from the data that the standing

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