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Cold Fronts and their relationship to density currents: A case study and idealised modelling experiments. Victoria Sinclair University of HelsinkI David Schultz University of Helsinki, FMI, University of Manchester, UK. Overview.
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Cold Fronts and their relationship to density currents: A case study and idealised modelling experiments Victoria Sinclair University of HelsinkI David Schultz University of Helsinki, FMI, University of Manchester, UK
Overview • Previous work and some theory concerning cold fronts and density currents • A Case Study • Observations • AROME simulation • Idealised Modeling Experiments • 2D density current and 3D cold front • Quantify governing dynamics
Can cold fronts be considered density currents? • Plenty of papers state that a cold front resembles a density current in appearance • Visual similarity does not equal dynamical similarity Tower observations of a cold front, Colorado Shapiro et al. 1985
Density Current theory X • Coriolis force can be neglected • Equations exists which predict the speed of movement as a function of density difference and the depth • Density currents have a low-level feeder flow behind the leading edge: the wind speeds behind the front (u) are greater than the speed that the gravity current moves at (c) X
Fronts Theory • Fronts are often assumed to be balanced, at least in the cross front direction • Acceleration term is assumed to be small. X X • No formula to predict the speed that fronts move at • Uncertainty remains as to what factors control the speed that cold fronts move at
Questions • What controls the speed that cold fronts move at? • Why do some cold fronts propagate – i.e. move faster than the normal component of the wind? • Why do some cold fronts move slower than the normal wind, and hence share a feature with gravity currents? • When do cold fronts collapse to resemble density currents? • Are collapsed cold fronts dynamically similar to density currents?
Motivation • Cold fronts that evolve into gravity current type features can produce hazardous weather • The scale of a collapsed front means that even high resolution NWP models will not capture the structure and evolution well
Case Study: synoptic evolution • Developed as a frontal wave on pre-existing front • Mature front and is far from the parent low • Simulated event with AROME 33h1, 2.5km 12 UTC 29 Oct 00 UTC 30 Oct 00 UTC 31 Oct
7 m/s 6 m/s Shallow frontal zone 00:11 UTC • Radial wind speeds from Kumpula Radar • Cold air is confined to a shallow layer • Resembles a density current Image provided by Matti Leskinen
Observations AROME Temperature at Kivenlahti black: 5 m red: 26 m blue: 48 m magenta: 93 m grey: 141 m green: 218 m brown: 266 m orange: 296 m black: 2 m blue: 38 m magenta: 112 m green: 200 m orange: 300 m
Observations AROME Temperature at Kuopio black: 5 m red: 26 m blue: 48 m magenta: 93 m grey: 141 m green: 218 m brown: 266 m orange: 296 m green: 200 m orange: 300 m black: 2 m blue: 38 m magenta: 112 m
Heat Fluxes SMEAR III SMEAR II BLACK: observed. GREY: AROME Data provided by Annika Nordbo and Ivan Mammarella
Black: 18:00 UTC Red: 20:00 UTC Green: 22:00 UTC Blue: 00:00 UTC Purple: 02:00 UTC Cyan: 04:00 UTC Location of Cold Front from AROME Averaged speed of front between 22:00 UTC and 02:00 UTC Section B = 5.03 ms-1 Section C = 5.47 ms-1 Section A = 6.92 ms-1 Front is located objectively Hewson (1998) Jenker et al (2010) B B C A
920 hPa 990 hPa u – c > 0 especially in south u – c ≈ 0 Wind Speeds from AROME • Wind speeds decrease behind the front • Unconvincing evidence of a “feeder flow”
Ascent, potential temperature Simulated Radar reflectivity 22 UTC, B 00 UTC, B 22 UTC, A 00 UTC, A
Case Study Conclusions • Shallow and narrow front • stable mid-troposphere • Stable BL may have prevented frontolysis by turbulent mixing • Dynamics differ to density current dynamics • No clear feeder flow • Prefrontal boundary layer appears to affect structure
Idealized Experiment • WRF-ARW • Weather Research and Forecasting – Advance Research WRF. V3.1 • Non-Hydrostatic, range of physics options • Supported by NCAR • First simulated a 2D density current at high resolution (100m grid spacing) • Calculate force balance.
Density Current 5 – 10 minutes : 20.5 ms-1 10 – 15 minutes: 15.3 ms-1
Force Balancelowest model level (995 hPa) Blue: Potential temperature Red: Pressure Gradient Force Purple: Coriolis Black: Acceleration
Simulate a Cold Front • Model a full 3D baroclinic life cycle • Include two nested domains over the cold front • horizontal grid spacing is 100km : 20km : 4km • All nests have 64 levels, model top at 100hPa • Initial experiment has no moisture and no physical parameterizations
Potential temperature and surface pressure. Day 4.5. Parent domain
Force balance LEVEL 1 ~ 975 h Pa LEVEL 7 ~ 805 h Pa Blue: Potential temperature Red: Pressure Gradient Force Purple: Coriolis Black: Acceleration
LEVEL 1 ~ 975 h Pa LEVEL 7 ~ 805 h Pa Blue: Potential temperature Red: Pressure Gradient Force Force Balance 5 hrs later Blue: Potential temperature Red: Pressure Gradient Force Purple: Coriolis Black: Acceleration
Conclusions • Idealised cold front does not visually resemble a density current, but does have many interesting features • The force balance shows a three way balance near the cold front • HYPOTHESIS • friction and turbulence will change force balance • Trailing part of cold front will be visually more similar to density currents
Future work • Higher resolution (1km) simulation of cold front, include boundary layer scheme • Different baroclinic life cycles • Simulate 3D density current at comparable resolution to cold front case
Thank you You can look at more animations on my webpages www.atm.helsinki.fi/~vsinclai