While geostrophic motion refers to the wind that would result from an exact balance between the Coriolis force and horizontal pressure gradient forces, Quasi-geostrophic (QG) motion refers to flows where the Coriolis force and pressure gradient forces are almost in balance, but with inertia also having an effect.
Contents
Origin
Atmospheric and oceanographic flows take place over horizontal length scales which are very large compared to their vertical length scale, and so they can be described using the shallow water equations. The Rossby number is a dimensionless number which characterises the strength of inertia compared to the strength of the Coriolis force. The quasi-geostrophic equations are approximations to the shallow water equations in the limit of small Rossby number, so that inertial forces are an order of magnitude smaller than the Coriolis and pressure forces. If the Rossby number is equal to zero then we recover geostrophic flow.
Derivation of the single-layer QG equations
In Cartesian coordinates, the components of the geostrophic wind are
where
The geostrophic vorticity
can therefore be expressed in terms of the geopotential as
Equation (2) can be used to find
The quasi-geostrophic vorticity equation can be obtained from the
The material derivative in (3) is defined by
The horizontal velocity
Two important assumptions of the quasi-geostrophic approximation are
The second assumption justifies letting the Coriolis parameter have a constant value
The approximate horizontal momentum equation thus has the form
Expressing equation (7) in terms of its components,
Taking
Because
equation (9) can therefore be written as
Defining the geopotential tendency
The right-hand side of equation (11) depends on variables
where
Multiplying (12) by
If for simplicity
Equation (14) is often referred to as the geopotential tendency equation. It relates the local geopotential tendency (term A) to the vorticity advection distribution (term B) and thickness advection (term C).
Using the chain rule of differentiation, term C can be written as
But based on the thermal wind relation,
In other words,
where
The three terms of equation (17) are, from left to right, the geostrophic relative vorticity, the planetary vorticity and the stretching vorticity.
Implications
As an air parcel moves about in the atmosphere, its relative, planetary and stretching vorticities may change but equation (17) shows that the sum of the three must be conserved following the geostrophic motion.
Equation (17) can be used to find
More importantly, the quasi-geostrophic system reduces the five-variable primitive equations to a one-equation system where all variables such as
Also, because