The Dual Nature of Chaos and Order in the Atmosphere
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Weather possesses chaos and order; it includes, as examples, emerging organized systems (such as tornadoes) and time varying forcing from recurrent seasons”.
2. Analysis and Discussion
2.1. An Analogy for Monostability and Multistability Using Skiing and Kayaking
2.2. Single-Types of Attractors, SDIC, and Monostability within the L63 Model
2.3. Coexisting Attractors and Multistability within the GLM
2.4. Time Varying Multistability and Recurrent Slowly Varying Solutions
2.5. Onset of Emerging Solutions
2.6. Various Types of Solutions within the L69 Model
- The L69 model is a closure-based, physically multiscale, mathematically linear, and numerically ill-conditioned system.
- The L69 multiscale model has been used for revealing energy transfer and scale interaction.
- The L69 linear model cannot produce chaos.
- Since it possesses both positive and negative eigenvalues with large variances, yielding a large condition number (e.g., Figure 4 and Figure 5 of [17]), the L69 model produces a different kind of sensitivity, as compared to SDIC within the L63 model.
- The model permits the occurrence of linearly stable and unstable solutions as well as oscillatory solutions. However, only unstable solutions have been a focus in predictability studies.
2.7. Distinct Predictability within Lorenz Models
- The L63 nonlinear model with monostability is effective for revealing the chaotic nature of weather, suggesting finite intrinsic predictability within the chaotic regime of the system (i.e., the atmosphere).
- The L69 linear model with ill-conditioning easily captures unstable modes and, thus, is effective for revealing the practical finite predictability of the model.
- The GLM with multistability suggests both limited and unlimited (i.e., up to a system’s lifetime) intrinsic predictability for chaotic and non-chaotic solutions, respectively.
2.8. Non-Chaotic Weather Systems
2.9. Suggested Future Tasks
3. Concluding Remarks
“The atmosphere possesses chaos and order; it includes, as examples, emerging organized systems (such as tornadoes) and time varying forcing from recurrent seasons”,
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Name | Definitions | Recommendations |
---|---|---|
1st kind of attractor coexistence | The coexistence of chaotic and steady-state solutions | [9,10,28] |
2nd kind of attractor coexistence | The coexistence of nonlinear oscillatory and steady-state solutions | [9,10] |
attractor | The smallest attracting point set that, itself, cannot be decomposed into two or more subsets with distinct basins of attraction. | [31] |
autonomous | A system of ODEs is autonomous if time does not explicitly appear within the equations. | [32] |
bifurcation | It occurs when the structure of a system’s solution significantly changes as a control parameter varies. | [32,33] |
butterfly effect | The phenomenon that a small alteration in the state of a dynamical system will cause subsequent states to differ greatly from the states that would have followed without the alteration. | [3] |
basin of attraction | As time advances, orbits initialized within a basin tend asymptotically to the attractor lying within the basin. The set of initial conditions leading to a given attractor. | [33] |
chaos | Bounded aperiodic orbits exhibit a sensitive dependence on ICs. | [3] |
final state sensitivity | Nearby orbits settle to one of multiple attractors for a finite but arbitrarily long time. | [34] |
hidden attractor | An attractor is called a hidden attractor if its basin of attraction does not intersect with small neighborhoods of equilibria. | [35] |
intransitivity | A specific type of solution lasts forever. | [36] |
intrinsic predictability | Predictability that is only dependent on flow itself. | [9,37] |
limit cycle | A nonlinear oscillatory solution; an isolated closed orbit | [32] |
monostability | The appearance of single-type solutions | [9,10,17] |
multistability | A system with multistability contains more than one bounded attractor that depends only on initial conditions. For example, the coexistence of two types of solutions. | [9,10,17,38,39] |
non-autonomous | Variable time ( appears on the right-hand side of the equations. | [32] |
phase space | Within a system of the first-order ODEs, a phase space or state space can be constructed using time-dependent variables as coordinates. | [40] |
practical predictability | Predictability that is limited by imperfect initial conditions and/or (mathematical) formulas. | [9,37] |
recurrence | Defined when a trajectory returns back to the neighborhood of a previously visited state. Recurrence may be viewed as a generalization of “periodicity” that braces quasi-periodicity with multiple frequencies and chaos. | [33] |
sensitive dependence | The property characterizing an orbit if most other orbits that pass close to it at some point do not remain close to it as time advances. | [3] |
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Shen, B.-W.; Pielke, R., Sr.; Zeng, X.; Cui, J.; Faghih-Naini, S.; Paxson, W.; Kesarkar, A.; Zeng, X.; Atlas, R. The Dual Nature of Chaos and Order in the Atmosphere. Atmosphere 2022, 13, 1892. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13111892
Shen B-W, Pielke R Sr., Zeng X, Cui J, Faghih-Naini S, Paxson W, Kesarkar A, Zeng X, Atlas R. The Dual Nature of Chaos and Order in the Atmosphere. Atmosphere. 2022; 13(11):1892. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13111892
Chicago/Turabian StyleShen, Bo-Wen, Roger Pielke, Sr., Xubin Zeng, Jialin Cui, Sara Faghih-Naini, Wei Paxson, Amit Kesarkar, Xiping Zeng, and Robert Atlas. 2022. "The Dual Nature of Chaos and Order in the Atmosphere" Atmosphere 13, no. 11: 1892. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13111892