1 / 33

NATS 101-06 Lecture 13 Curved Flow and Friction Local winds

This lecture discusses the effects of curved flow and friction on local winds, including the necessary centripetal acceleration for curved flow and the impact of friction on wind speed and direction. The lecture also explores the vertical motions associated with curvature and friction in the atmosphere.

medward
Download Presentation

NATS 101-06 Lecture 13 Curved Flow and Friction Local winds

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NATS 101-06Lecture 13Curved Flow and FrictionLocal winds

  2. Supplemental References for Today’s Lecture Gedzelman, S. D., 1980: The Science and Wonders of the Atmosphere. 535 pp. John-Wiley & Sons. (ISBN 0-471-02972-6) Danielson, E. W., J. Levin and E. Abrams, 1998: Meteorology. 462 pp. McGraw-Hill. (ISBN 0-697-21711-6)

  3. Recall: Uniform Circular Motion Requires Acceleration/Force Circle Center Final Velocity Acceleration directed toward center of circle Circular Path Final Velocity Initial Velocity Initial Velocity Centripetal (center seeking) acceleration is required for curved flow, i.e. to change the direction of the velocity vector!

  4. 5640 m 5700 m Flow Around Curved Contours Assume PGF constant size along entire channel L H Zero Required Centripetal Acceleration

  5. 5640 m 5700 m Forces for Curved Flow Assume PGF constant size along entire channel PGF Wind PGF Geo Wind PGF CF CF Wind Centripetal = CF + PGF Centripetal << CF or PGF Gradient Wind Balance CF

  6. Wind Speed Increases 5640 m 5700 m Wind Speed Decreases Gradient Wind Balance Assume PGF constant size along entire channel Faster than Geo Wind Geo Wind Wind speeds are Slowest at trough Fastest at ridge Therefore, wind speeds Increase downwind of trough Decrease downwind of ridge Slower than Geo Wind

  7. Wind Speed Increases Area Increases 5640 m 5700 m Wind Speed Decreases Wind Speed Decreases Area Decreases Gradient Wind Balance Assume PGF constant size along entire channel 2 1 Speeds and Areas: Increase downwind of trough Decrease downwind of ridge

  8. Area Increases Divergence Area Decreases Convergence Divergence and Convergence Assume PGF constant size along entire channel Parcel Shapes: Stretch downwind of trough Compress downwind of ridge

  9. Divergence Net Mass Loss Convergence Net Mass Gain Divergence and Convergence Assume PGF constant size along entire channel Large Mass transport across channel Small

  10. Vertical Motion Ridge Ridge Trough Gedzelman, p249 Mass Conservation leads toUpward motion beneath regions of divergence Downward motion beneath regions of convergence

  11. Convergence Divergence Divergence 500mb WV Animation (Java applet)

  12. Super-geostrophic Sub-geostrophic

  13. Divergence Divergence Convergence Convergence

  14. Convergence Divergence Divergence Convergence

  15. NowAdd Friction near the surface…This changes the force balance

  16. Force of Friction 1 Pressure Gradient Force 1004 mb Friction Geostrophic Wind 1008 mb Coriolis Force Frictional Force is directed opposite to velocity. It acts to slow down (decelerate) the wind. Once the wind speed becomes slower than the geostrophic value, geostrophic balance is destroyed because the Coriolis Force decreases.

  17. Force of Friction 2 Pressure Gradient Force 1004 mb Wind Friction 1008 mb Coriolis Force Because PGF becomes larger than CF, air parcel will turn toward lower pressure. Friction Turns Wind Toward Lower Pressure.

  18. Force of Friction 3 1004 mb Wind CF PGF 1008 mb Fr Eventually, a balance among the PGF, Coriolis and Frictional Force is achieved. PGF + CF + Friction = 0 Net force is zero, so parcel does not accelerate.

  19. Force of Friction 4 1004 mb 30o-40o Mtns Water 20o-30o 1008 mb The decrease in wind speed and deviation to lower pressure depends on surface roughness. Smooth surfaces (water) show the least slowing and turning (typically 20o-30o from geostrophic). Rough surfaces (mtns) show the most slowing and turning (typically 30o-40o from geostrophic).

  20. Force of Friction 5 SFC 0.3 km 1004 mb 0.6 km ~1 km 1008 mb Friction is important in the lowest km above sfc. Its impact gradually decreases with height. By 1-2 km, the wind is close to geostrophic or gradient wind balance.

  21. Flow at Surface Lows and Highs Gedzelman, p249 Spirals Inward Convergence Spirals Outward Divergence

  22. www.met.tamu.edu

  23. Friction Induced Vertical Motion downward motion upward motion Ahrens, Fig 6.21

  24. Summary • Curved Flow Requires Centripetal Acceleration Difference between PGF and Coriolis Force Speed Changes => Convergence-Divergence • Frictional Force Causes Winds to Turn toward Low Pressure Important in the lowest 1 km above the Surface Leads to Convergence-Divergence • Curvature and Friction Leads to Vertical Motions

  25. Atmospheric Scales of Motion Ahrens, Fig 7.1

  26. DIV CON Heat Heat Warm Rising Sinking Cold CON DIV Heat Heat Review:Thermally Direct Circulation

  27. Sea Breeze Development(Courtesy of Mohan Ramamurthy, WW2010) 1 2 3 4

  28. DIV CON Rising Sinking CON DIV Heat Heat Sea Breeze Development(Courtesy of Mohan Ramamurthy, WW2010) 5 6 7

  29. Sea Breeze versus Land Breeze (Courtesy of Mohan Ramamurthy, WW2010) PM Stronger Temperature contrast during PM than during AM Sea breezes are stronger than land breezes AM LAX Airport 4 PM upper 7 AM lower

  30. Sea Breeze • Regular feature of many coastal areas California, Florida, Gulf Coast • Occurs along large lakes-Great Lakes • Typically strongest during Spring-Summer • Can penetrate inland 50 km or more • Temperatures can drop ~10oC • Nose of cool air can trigger thunderstorms Florida Satellite Loop

  31. DIV CON Rising Sinking CON DIV Heat Heat Mountain-Valley Breeze Sun warms slopes Density decreases Air rises IR cools slopes Density increases Air drains Ahrens, Older Ed. Mountain-Valley circulation important to Tucson Convection over Catalinas during PM summer. SE drainage flows during early AM all year.

  32. PM heating AM cooling 5 AM 5 PM 5 PM 5 AM PM heating AM cooling AM TUS PM Phoenix-Tucson Diurnal Winds TUS AM PHX PHX PM

  33. Assignment for Next Lecture • Reading - Ahrens pg 167-181 • Problems - 7.3, 7.4, 7.5

More Related