a&os c110/c227: review of thermodynamics and dynamics iv robert fovell ucla atmospheric and...
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A&OS C110/C227: Review of thermodynamics and dynamics IVRobert FovellUCLA Atmospheric and Oceanic [email protected]
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Notes• Everything in this presentation should be familiar• Please feel free to ask questions, and remember to refer to
slide numbers if/when possible• If you have Facebook, please look for the group
“UCLA_Synoptic”. You need my permission to join. (There are two “Robert Fovell” pages on FB. One is NOT me, even though my picture is being used.)
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Question for thought• Temperature differences make pressure differences, and
pressure differences drive winds. • The purpose of winds is to “blow themselves out”, to reduce
the temperature difference• The ideal situation is for the atmosphere to push warm air
towards the cold place and cold air towards the warm place simultaneously
• Consider the near-surface wind. Assume air can move only in one direction. Which is “easier” to accomplish: warm towards cold or cold towards warm?
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The sea-breeze circulation or “one-cell” model
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Step I
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• Start with no pressure difference between sea and land• Heating increases temperature and thickness of air over land (hypsometric)• Pressure difference starts moving air from warm column into cold column
Step II
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• The flow of air aloft from the warm to the cold column implies vertical motions• Air rises in warm column, and cools adiabatically as a result• Air sinks in the cold column, and is subject to compression warming
Step III
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• The column mass changes imply surface pressure changes, owing to hydrostatics• Surface pressure beneath the warm column drops, as mass is lost above it• Surface pressure beneath the cold column rises as mass flows into it
Step IV
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• The surface pressure gradient encourages air to flow from the cold towards warm• The “one-cell” circulation, driven by a temperature difference, is completed• Note the importance of vertical motions in reducing the temperature difference
Thermally direct• This circulation is established spontaneously in response to
the temperature difference that develops between land and sea. It does not need to be forced
• This circulation is termed thermally direct• Note the thermally direct circulation consists of warmer air
rising and colder air sinking, which works against the original temperature difference
• Note also the near-surface wind is directed from cold towards warm
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Hemispheric meridional (three-cell) circulation model
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Hemispheric one-cell model
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• Apply the one-cell sea-breeze model to the entire northern hemisphere• This would suggest surface low pressure and rising air over the warm equator
and surface high pressure and sinking air over the cold pole
Three-cell step I
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• Earth’s rotation breaks the single cell circulation into three cells, named thepolar, Ferrel and Hadley cells
• Sinking air and surface high pressure are created near 30˚N• Rising air and surface low pressure are established near 60˚N
Three-cell step II
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• The polar and Hadley cells are thermally direct• Note the middle (Ferrel) cell is thermally indirect. It is forced, the “middle cog”• The surface pressure gradients are now as shown. What would the geostrophic
winds be?
Three-cell step III
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• The Coriolis force opposes PGF, acts to the right of the winds in the N hemisphere• The geostrophic winds would be easterly (east to west) between the pole and
60˚N, and between 30˚N and the equator• The midlatitude winds are westerly
Surface winds – plan view
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• The polar easterlies and midlatitude westerlies have been drawn in geostrophicbalance, but not the tropical north-east trade winds.
• The trade winds are depicted with a component from H to L pressure. Why?
The geostrophic wind• Recall the geostrophic
wind equations• The Coriolis
parameter f is a function of latitude, and vanishes at f = 0˚ (equator)• Geostrophic balance
cannot be maintained in the tropics. f is too small. 16
What f is and means…
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f is the vertical component of Earth’s rotation vector
What f is and means…
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What f is and means…
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The “thermal wind”: basic concept
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Winds above the surface• Earth’s rotation produces a three-cell per hemisphere structure, with
polar easterlies and midlatitude westerlies in geostrophic balance, and tropical NE trades with a component from H towards L• Note surface friction was not included in that simple picture
• How do the winds vary with height above the surface?• Keep in mind the following:• Temperature differences make pressure differences, and pressure
differences drive winds• Temperature differences ALSO make pressure differences vary with
altitude… which results in vertical wind shear• Wind shear is the change of wind speed and/or direction over a distance• The relationship between horizontal temperature variations and how the
horizontal wind changes with height is called the thermal wind relationship
• The thermal wind is the vertical shear of the geostrophic wind. The concept is only valid when and where geostrophic balance is
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Thermal wind I
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• Suppose the 1000 mb isobar has no N-S tilt, and therefore no PGF• The 1000-750 mb layer T is higher to the S, so the PGF points to the N at 750 mb• The 750 mb geostrophic wind is westerly, as shown at right• The horizontal T difference has already caused a westerly vertical wind shear
Thermal wind II
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• The 750-500 mb layer is ALSO warmer to the south, so it is thicker there• This means the 500 mb isosurface has greater tilt, and larger PGF, than at 750 mb• Therefore, the 500 mb geostrophic wind is even more westerly than at 750 mb• The effects of horizontal temperature differences are cumulative
Thermal wind III
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• The 500-250 mb layer is still warmer and thicker to the south• Westerly wind speed continues to increase with height• Where it is warmer to the south, the vertical shear is westerly
Thermal wind IV
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• Suppose the 250-100 mb layer is warmer and thicker to the N. (How? Why?)• The 100 mb layer has less tilt than the 250 mb layer• 100 mb PGF is smaller, and the wind, though still westerly, is weaker in magnitude• Where it is warmer to the north, the vertical shear is easterly
Thermal wind V
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•The 250-100 mb layer can be warmer at the pole because it resides in thestratosphere, while the tropical layer is still below the tropopause
• In the stratosphere, T ceases decreasing with height, and may increase• Note the fastest westerly wind resides where the N-S T difference vanishes
Jet stream I• The tropical
atmosphere is relatively warm, so the troposphere is deep and the tropopause is high• Minimum T is
reached at the tropopause and it’s quite cold (-80˚C) 27
Jet stream II• Suppose the troposphere
contains the same mass above equator and pole (not quite true)
• Surface pressure ~ same, too
• The colder polar troposphere needs to be thinner, so its tropopause is lower
• As drawn, T in the polar stratosphere does not increase with height, but at least it stops decreasing
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Jet stream III• Note the level where the
polar air T equals tropical air T. Above that level, the polar air is actually warmer, even in winter.• At that level, the N-S
temperature gradient vanishes. That is the level where the midlatitude (subtropical) jet stream is found 29
Recap
30This explains why a jet stream would be found at a height wherethe horizontal temperature gradient vanishes. It does not explain
why jet streams tend to be concentrated in space.
Zonal wind variation with latitude and pressure (height)Including NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis plots obtained fromhttp://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/cgi-bin/data/composites/printpage.pl
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Zonal wind vs. pressure/latitude• Data from the NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis, representing long term
means from 1950 to 2010• “Zonal wind” means the west-east component, westerly is
positive, easterly is negative• First plot will also be averaged through the year (January to
December), creating an annual average• South pole is at left, north pole at right
• Things we will note• Westerly winds near surface in midlatitudes of both hemispheres
that increase with height through troposphere• Westerly jet at about 200 mb level in both hemispheres at 30-40˚
latitude. Westerly winds decrease farther aloft• Weak easterly flow above equator through a very deep layer• Polar surface easterlies very difficult to see.
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CW
WC
Two vertical profiles of zonal wind U
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Questions for thought• Zonal wind vs. height for two
times of year• Height #5 is the tropopause,
and J means jet max• In the profile at left there is
an easterly jet at height #1. It is westerly at height #1 in the profile at right.
1. At which heights (1-5) does the horizontal temperature gradient vanish for each profile?
2. Which profile most likely represents summer, and why?
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The “thermal wind”: temperature advection
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Problem• Suppose the geostrophic wind at level p is from the south, at 10
m/s. • Suppose the horizontal temperature gradient is purely N-S, with
colder air to the north• Questions will be:
1. In a N-S vertical cross-section, sketch isobaric surfaces p and p-∆p. Also sketch the west-east component of the geostrophic wind at levels p and p-∆p
2. In an E-W vertical cross-section, sketch isobaric surfaces p and p-∆p. Also sketch the west-east component of the geostrophic wind at levels p and p-∆p
3. In a plan view, draw the geostrophic winds at p and p-∆p, the shear vector, and isotherms of layer mean temperature
4. Determine the sense of temperature advection: cold, warm or no advection
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Question 1: In a N-S vertical cross-section, sketch isobaric surfaces p and p-∆p. Also sketch the west-east component of the geostrophic wind at levels p and p-∆p
41• The geostrophic wind at level p is from the S. This means the PGF points W.• Thus, isobaric surface p does NOT tilt in the N-S direction, since the N-S PGF
component is zero. • The zonal component of the geostrophic wind at level p is zero.
Question 1: In a N-S vertical cross-section, sketch isobaric surfaces p and p-∆p. Also sketch the west-east component of the geostrophic wind at levels p and p-∆p
42• However, it is colder to the N, so there is a westerly geostrophic wind at p-∆p • Thus, there is a vertical shear in the west-east wind• Westerly vertical shear occurs when it is colder to the N
Question 2: In an E-W vertical cross-section, sketch isobaric surfaces p and p-∆p. Also sketch the west-east component of the geostrophic wind at levels p and p-∆p
43• The geostrophic wind at level p is from the S. This means the PGF points W.• How does isobaric surface p-∆p tilt?
Question 2: In an E-W vertical cross-section, sketch isobaric surfaces p and p-∆p. Also sketch the west-east component of the geostrophic wind at levels p and p-∆p
44• The problem states there is NO temperature gradient in the W-E direction• Therefore, there is no thickness variation from W to E• The thermal wind concept says there is no shear in the N-S wind between levels
p and p-∆p, so the PGF at level p-∆p is the same as at level p• There is a wind at both levels. There is no shear in this component between them.
Question 3: In a plan view, draw the geostrophic winds at p and p-∆p, the shear vector, and isotherms of layer mean temperature
45• The geostrophic wind at level p is from the south, as shown• What does the geostrophic wind at level p-∆p look like?
Question 3: In a plan view, draw the geostrophic winds at p and p-∆p, the shear vector, and isotherms of layer mean temperature
46• The geostrophic wind at level p-∆p has a component of PGF pointing W, yielding
a southerly wind component, AND also a PGF component pointing N, representing a westerly wind component
• As a consequence, the wind at p-∆p is from the southwest
Question 3: In a plan view, draw the geostrophic winds at p and p-∆p, the shear vector, and isotherms of layer mean temperature
47• The shear vector is drawn from the head of the lower level wind vector to the
head of the upper level wind vector.• What do the isotherms of layer mean T look like? Keep in mind the temperature
gradient was purely N-S in this problem
Question 3: In a plan view, draw the geostrophic winds at p and p-∆p, the shear vector, and isotherms of layer mean temperature
48• Isotherms of layer mean temperature are parallel to the shear vector, with
cold air to the LEFT
Question 4: Determine the sense of temperature advection: cold, warm or no advection
49• Note the wind at both levels has a component blowing from warm towards cold.
This is WARM ADVECTION• Note further that the component of the wind DOING the advection is constant with
height. The shear vector shows that what changes between the levels isparallel to the isotherms, and so isn’t doing any advecting!
A closer look…
50• There are three independent pieces of information in this problem: the geostrophic
wind at the lower level, at the upper level, and the orientation of the T gradient• Given two of those, you can determine the third• Example: given one wind and shear vector, you know lower level wind and the
isotherms. Given isotherms and one wind, you can get the other wind
Important information I• In the example problem the winds turned clockwise with height.
This is called veering, and is associated with warm advection• When the wind turns counterclockwise with height, that is called
backing and is associated with cold advection• Note again the wind component doing the temperature
advection does not change magnitude with height!• BUT the thermal wind is the vertical shear of the geostrophic
wind. If the wind is not geostrophic, the thermal wind concept does not strictly apply
• The wind is NOT geostrophic when• The isobars are curved• Friction is acting, as near the real surface• Coriolis force is unimportant (spatial/temporal scales are too small)• You are too close to the Equator
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Important information II• In particular, note that the wind ALMOST ALWAYS veers with
height near the surface, due to FRICTION• Friction slows the wind, reducing Coriolis force and permitting
the large-scale wind to flow with a component towards L pressure• As one ascends from the surface, friction lessens, so the wind
moves clockwise towards geostrophic balance• This near-surface veering does NOT necessarily mean warm
advection is occurring• When friction is important, the wind isn’t geostrophic!
• When the wind isn’t geostrophic, one needs to replace the actual wind with a geostrophic version to apply the thermal wind concept
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• Let the thermal wind (vertiical shear vector) between layers p0 and p1 (p0 > p1) be defined as
• These components can be related to the horizontal gradients of layer mean T as
where f = 2OsinF and Rd = 287 J/(kg K) for dry air
Computing shear and T gradients
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