Spatial and Temporal Features of Mountain Wave Related Turbulence

Post on 06-Jan-2016

32 views 1 download

Tags:

description

Spatial and Temporal Features of Mountain Wave Related Turbulence. * Ž eljko Ve č enaj, # Stephan de Wekker & + Vanda Grubi š i ć * Department of Geophysics, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, Croatia # Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Virginia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Spatial and Temporal Features of Mountain Wave Related Turbulence

Spatial and Temporal Features of Spatial and Temporal Features of Mountain Wave Related Mountain Wave Related

TurbulenceTurbulence

**ŽŽeljko Veeljko Veččenaj, enaj, ##Stephan de Wekker & Stephan de Wekker & ++Vanda GrubiVanda Grubiššiićć*Department of Geophysics, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, Croatia#Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Virginia+Division of Atmospheric Sciences, Desert Research Institute, Reno, Nevada

Email: Email: zvecenaj@gfz.hrzvecenaj@gfz.hr

..

CONTENTCONTENT

I. INTRODUCTION

II. DATA ANALYSIS

III. RESULTS

IV. CONCLUSIONS

I. INTRODUCTION

• OBJECTIVE:– To study the horizontal and vertical structure of TKE generation and

destruction in a variety of weather situations during T-REX– To combine aerosol lidar data and towers data

• TURBULENT KINETIC ENERGY BALANCE EQUATION:

• Richardson number

• We are interested in following situations:

Ri >> 0 ……… Stable situation

Ri << 0 ………. Convectively produced turbulence

Ri ≈ 0 ………... Turbulence produced by wind stress

22

z

v

z

u

zgRi

I.1. ESTIMATION OF ε

• For evaluation of ε, the Inertial Dissipation Method (IDM) provided by the Kolmogorov’s 1941 hypotheses can be employed

• Condition: Taylor’s Hypotheses (TH) of frozen turbulence must be valid (transformation from time to space domain)

• Criterion: (e.g. Stull, 1988)

M.........Mean horizontal wind speed

σM........Standard deviation

5.0MM

• Power spectrum density in inertial subrange:

(1)

• Using TH, ε can be evaluated from (Champagne et al., 1977):

(2)

..........mean streamwise velocity component

Su(f) ......power spectrum density

..........Kolmogorov’s constant

2/33/5 )(2

fSf

Uu

U

3/53/2)( kkSu

II. DATA ANALYSIS

Figure 1. The map of the area of interest along with the towers locations.

• Ggccc

• Height of towers: 35 m

• 6 vertical levels: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 m

• CSAT3 ultrasonic anemometers

• Sampling rate: 60 Hz

• The data are averaged down to 10 Hz for further analysis

• period of interest: 02 March 00 UTC to 04 March 00 UTC (IOP1)

Figure 2. East (first row) and north (second row) 10 Hz wind speed components of the observed 6 hr episode (black curve). White curve is the 5 min moving average. Vertical dashed lines denote a period of interest.

Figure 3. The time series of the Bulk Richardson number in the layer between 5 & 30 m (for the west tower between 5 & 25 m).

Figure 4. Time series of 1 minute dissipation rate values

Figure 5. Time series of 15 minute dissipation rate values

III. RESULTS

Figure 6. Vertical distribu-tion of 15 minutes averages of the 1 min TKE dissipation rate in time for all three towers.

Figure 7. Vertical distribu-tion of 15 minutes averages of the 1 min mechanical term in time for all three towers.

IV. CONCLUSIONS

• We have started to analyze turbulence data from the three NCAR towers

• Independence of the averaging period is present

• Balance of the mechanical term and the TKE dissipation rate is present

• Next steps:

(1) To extend this work to the other two towers and to other IOPs/EOPs to investigate spatial and temporal structure in a

variety of stability and wind conditions

(2) Comparison with estimates/observations from other instruments (wind profiler/lidar/aircraft)

Acknowledgments: we would like to thank Steve Oncley for providing turbulence data