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Wind: small scale and local systems Chapter 9 Scales of atmospheric motion. The tiny microscale motions constitute a part of the larger mesoscale motions, which, in turn, are part of the much larger synoptic scale. Notice that as the scale becomes larger, motions observed at the smaller scale are no longer visible. The scales of atmospheric motion with the phenomenon’s average size and life span. (Because the actual size of certain features may vary, some of the features fall into more than one category.) • Friction and Turbulence in Boundary Layer – Friction of fluid flow - viscosity – Laminar flow - smooth flow • Slowed by molecular viscosity between air layers – Irregular turbulent motion • Eddy viscosity - wind speed and direction varies causing gusts • Roughness near ground – Mechanical turbulence creates much greater drag • Decreases away from earth surface – Planetary Boundary layer (PBL) – friction layer – Depth of PBL varies- top usually near 1000m • Thermal turbulence Winds flowing past an obstacle : Small scale eddy (a) In stable air, light winds produce small eddies and little vertical mixing. (b) Greater winds in unstable air create deep, vertically mixing eddies that produce strong, gusty surface winds. When the air is stable and the terrain fairly smooth: (a), vertical mixing is at a minimum, and the effect of surface friction only extends upward a relatively short distance above the surface. When the air is unstable and the terrain rough: (b), vertical mixing is at a maximum, and the effect of surface friction extends upward through a much greater depth of atmosphere. Within the region of frictional influence, vertical mixing increases the wind speed near the ground and decreases it aloft. (Wind at the surface is measured at 10 m above the surface.) Big Eddies Satellite image of eddies forming on the leeward (downwind) side of the Cape Verde Islands during April, 2004. As the air moves past the islands, it breaks into a variety of swirls as indicated by the cloud pattern. (The islands are situated in the Atlantic Ocean, off Africa’s western coast.) Under stable conditions, air flowing past a mountain range can create eddies many kilometers downwind of the mountain itself. Roll eddy – rotors, clear air turbulance Wind shear – abrupt change in wind speed or direction Strong winds flowing past an obstruction, such as these hills, can produce a reverse flow of air that strikes an object from the side opposite the general wind direction • Observations: Eddies & Air Pockets – Eddies on leeward side of solid object – Roll eddies, mountain wave eddy (clear air turbulence –CAT ) – Increase wind speed/shear deforms layer into wave and air pocket. • Microscale winds blowing over the Earth’s surface – Wind erosion, desert pavements, sand ripples – Snow ripples, snow dunes, snow rollers, snow fences – Windbreak, shelter belt – Effects on oceans/lakes – wind waves depend on: • Wind speed • Time • Fetch The shape of this sand dune reveals that the wind was blowing from left to right when it formed. Note also the shape of the sand ripples on the dune. Snow rollers — natural cylindrical rolls of snow grow larger as the wind blows them down a hillside. Snow drifts accumulating behind snow fences in Wyoming. A properly designed shelterbelt can reduce the air flow downwind for a distance of 25 times the height of the belt. The minimum wind flow behind the belt is typically measured downwind at a distance of about 4 times the belt’s height. Determining wind speed and direction • Wind characterized by direction, speed, and gustiness • Wind direction describes the direction from which it is blowing An onshore wind blows from water to land; whereas an offshore wind blows from land to water. Wind direction can be expressed in degrees about a circle or as compass points. • Influence of Prevailing Winds – Prevailing most frequently observed direction during a given time period – Impact human and natural landscape – Wind rose This wind rose represents the percent of time the wind blew from different directions at a given site during the month of January for the past ten years. The prevailing wind is NW and the wind direction of least frequency is NE. Determining wind speed and direction • Wind Measurements – Wind vane – Pressure plate anemometer – Cup anemometer – Aerovane – Rawinsonde – Wind soundings • Lidar • Wind profiler • QuickScat A profile of wind direction and speed above Hillsboro, Kansas, on June 28, 2006. • Thermal circulation – Heating and cooling of the atmosphere above the ground create cold, core high and warm, core low pressure cells. – Wind travels from high to low and rises until it cools and begins to sink. • Sea and Land Breeze – Uneven heating of land and water – Day: land hot, water cold = sea breeze – Night: water hot, land cold = land breeze – Sea breeze front, sea breeze convergence Typically, during the summer over Florida, converging sea breezes in the afternoon produce uplift that enhances thunderstorm development and rainfall. However, when westerly surface winds dominate and a ridge of high pressure forms over the area, thunderstorm activity diminishes, and dry conditions prevail. The convergence of two lake breezes and their influence on the maximum temperature during July in upper Michigan. Sinking air develops where surface winds move offshore, speed up, and diverge. Rising air develops as surface winds move onshore, slow down, and converge. Local Winds • Seasonally Changing Winds: The Monsoon – Arabic for seasonal – Winds change direction seasonably causing extreme dry and wet season – Eastern and southern Asia, North America Changing annual wind-flow patterns associated with the winter and summer Asian monsoon. Enhanced infrared satellite image with heavy arrow showing strong monsoonal circulation. Moist, southerly winds are causing showers and thunderstorms (yellow and red areas) to form over the southwestern section of the United States during July, 2001. Local Winds • Mountain and Valley Breeze – On mountain slopes, warm air rises during the day creating a valley breeze; during night nocturnal drainage of cool air creating a mountain breeze – Associated with cumulus clouds in the afternoon • Katabatic winds – Cold wind rushes down elevated slopes, usually 10 kts or less but can reach hurricane strength Strong katabatic winds can form where cold winds rush downhill from an elevated plateau covered with snow. • Chinook/Foehn Winds – Dry warm descending on the leeward side of a orographic barrier – Eastern slope of Rockies (chinook), Europe (foehn), Argentina (zonda) • Santa Anna Winds – Warm dry that blows from east or northeast down canyons into S. California – Very fast, desiccates vegetation, providing fuel for fires Exceptionally hot, dry local winds that form over North Africa and the Sahara Desert. Desert winds Dust storms, sand storms, dust devil, haboob A large dust storm over the African Sahara Desert during February, 2001, sweeps westward off the coast, then northward into a mid-latitude cyclonic storm west of Spain, as indicated by red arrow. A large haboob (dust storm) moves through Phoenix, Arizona, on July 5, 2011. The formation of a dust devil. On a hot, dry day, the atmosphere next to the ground becomes unstable. As the heated air rises, wind blowing past an obstruction twists the rising air, forming a rotating air column or dust devil. Air from the sides rushes into the rising column, lifting sand, dust, leaves, or any other loose material from the surface.