The dynamics of heat lows over elevated terrain
✍ Scribed by Roger K. Smith; Thomas Spengler
- Book ID
- 104576685
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 932 KB
- Volume
- 137
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0035-9009
- DOI
- 10.1002/qj.737
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Orographic effects on the dynamics of heat lows are investigated in an idealized flow configuration using a hydrostatic numerical model. The behaviour of the heat low that forms over a plateau‐like orography on a circular island is compared with that when the island is flat, and that when the plateau is surrounded by land instead of sea. In all cases, a broad‐scale, negative radial gradient of potential temperature forms in the daytime mixed layer over land. The presence of orography enhances the broad‐scale baroclinicity over the orographic slope due to the identical heating of a column of air with a reduced mass, i.e. lower surface pressure. In the absence of sea, the baroclinicity is solely confined to the slope of the orography. The broad‐scale potential temperature gradient results in an overturning circulation in the lowest few kilometres, which is separate from the shallower and more intense sea breeze circulation in the island cases. The presence of orography leads to a stronger overturning circulation via enhanced baroclinicity. In the case without sea, both the overturning circulation and tangential circulation are closely tied to the orography. The overturning circulation advects absolute angular momentum inwards to spin up the low‐level circulation, despite some frictional loss of angular momentum en route. During the night, radiative cooling over the land leads to a strong nocturnal low‐level jet that amplifies the spin‐up process. During the daytime, the cyclone weakens as the angular momentum is convectively mixed through a deep layer. The study extends an earlier one of Reichmann and Smith and corrects some details in their model. The results offer a refined interpretation of the Atlantic inflow to the Saharan heat low, described recently by Grams et al., and emphasize the role of orography in the formation of the inland baroclinic zone, which is a feature thereof. Copyright © 2011 Royal Meteorological Society
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Inversion fluxes of virtual heat were computed for seven clear days over the Pre-Alpine region in Switzerland with profile data from a sequence of radio soundings. Several entrainment models based on the turbulent kinetic energy equation were tested with the data. It was found that the relatively si
An indirect method of estimating the surface heat flux from observations of vertical velocity variance at the lower mid-levels of the convective atmospheric boundary layer is described. Comparison of surface heat flux estimates with those from boundary-layer heating rates is good, and this method se