| |   |  Thanks, I am going to bring this up at breakfast tomorrow.
  Baroclinic instability Baroclinic instability is a fluid dynamical instability of fundamental importance in the  atmosphere and in the  oceans. In the atmosphere it is the dominant mechanism shaping the  cyclones and  anticyclones that dominate  weather in mid-latitudes. In the ocean it generates a field of  mesoscale (100 km or smaller)  eddies that play various roles in oceanic dynamics and the transport of  tracers. Baroclinic instability is a concept relevant to rapidly rotating, strongly  stratified fluids.
   Whether a fluid counts as rapidly rotating is determined in this context by the  Rossby number, which is a measure of how close the flow is to solid body rotation. More precisely, a flow in solid body rotation has  vorticity that is proportional to its  angular velocity.  The Rossby number is a measure of the departure of the vorticity from  that of solid body rotation. The Rossby number must be small for the  concept of baroclinic instability to be relevant. When the Rossby number  is large, other kinds of instabilities, often referred to as inertial,  become more relevant.
   The simplest example of a stably stratified flow is an incompressible  flow with density decreasing with height. In a compressible gas such as  the atmosphere, the relevant measure is the vertical gradient of the  entropy,  which must increase with height for the flow to be stably stratified.  One measures the strength of the stratification by asking how large the  vertical shear of the horizontal winds has to be in order to destabilize  the flow and produce the classic  Kelvin–Helmholtz instability. This measure is the  Richardson number. When the Richardson number is large, the stratification is strong enough to prevent this shear instability.
   Before the classic work of  Jule Charney and  Eric Eady on baroclinic instability in the late 1940s, [3] [4]  most theories trying to explain the structure of mid-latitude eddies  took as their starting points the high Rossby number or small Richardson  number instabilities familiar to fluid dynamicists at that time. The  most important feature of baroclinic instability is that it exists even  in the situation of rapid rotation (small Rossby number) and strong  stable stratification (large Richardson's number) typically observed in  the atmosphere.
   The energy source for baroclinic instability is the  potential energy in the environmental flow. As the instability grows, the  center of mass  of the fluid is lowered. In growing waves in the atmosphere, cold air  moving downwards and equatorwards displaces the warmer air moving  polewards and upwards.
   Baroclinic instability can be investigated in the laboratory using a rotating, fluid filled  annulus.  The annulus is heated at the outer wall and cooled at the inner wall,  and the resulting fluid flows give rise to baroclinically unstable  waves. [5] [6]
   The term "baroclinic" refers to the mechanism by which  vorticity  is generated. Vorticity is the curl of the velocity field. In general,  the evolution of vorticity can be broken into contributions from  advection (as vortex tubes move with the flow),  stretching  and twisting (as vortex tubes are pulled or twisted by the flow) and  baroclinic vorticity generation, which occurs whenever there is a  density gradient along surfaces of constant pressure. Baroclinic flows  can be contrasted with  barotropic flows in which density and pressure surfaces coincide and there is no baroclinic generation of vorticity.
   The study of the evolution of these baroclinic instabilities as they  grow and then decay is a crucial part of developing theories for the  fundamental characteristics of midlatitude weather. |  
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