Title: UNSTABLE
1UNSTABLE
Science Question 1 ABL Processes Water Vapour
and Convergence Boundaries
- Neil Taylor
- Hydrometeorology and Arctic Lab, Environment
Canada - Dave Sills
- Cloud Physics and Severe Weather Research
Section, Environment Canada
2Outline
- Taylor
- Factors important for CI
- Science Question 1
- What do we need to do to resolve processes?
- Required Instrumentation and deployment
- Sills
- Further instrumentation and deployment strategies
(ATMOS, AMMOS, Aircraft)
3Factors Important for CI Water Vapour
- CI potential can depend critically on small
variations in temperature (1C) and mixing ratio
(1 gkg-1) - Variations of this magnitude are common over
short distances but not resolved by
synoptic-scale observation networks
Fabry (2006)
4Moisture Varies in Vertical Too
Weckwerth et al. (1996)
5Factors Important for CIWater Vapour
Availability / Depth
- Availability (e.g., Td, mixing ratio)
- Conceptually need lifted parcel to attain level
of free convection (reduces CIN and increases
CAPE) - Impacts on stability (CAPE / CIN)
- CAPE likely overestimated using SFC-based parcels
- 1 gkg-1 change in mixing ratio 2.5x impact on
CAPE as 1 C - scales lt 20 km CIN more sensitive to changes in
mixing ratio - scales gt 20 km CIN more sensitive to changes in
temperature - Depth (depth of mixed moist layer)
- Mixed-layer parcels better represent convective
cloud-base heights than SFC-based parcels - CI less likely in shallow moisture conditions
- Deeper moisture more conducive to severe storms
6SFC-Based vs. Mean Layer Parcel
SFC-based LCL underestimated
Craven et al. (2002) comparisons of SFC and
mean-layer parcels to observed cloud bases
SBCAPE consistently higher than MLCAPE
7Factors Important for CIABL Convergence
- Strength / Depth of lift
- Important for CI / maintenance of existing storms
- More intense storms triggered by ABL convergence
lines - Local deepening of moisture associated with
convergence lines - Modify environment within 10 km
8Factors Important for CI Meso. Circulations and
Wind Shear
- Mesoscale circulations associated with ABL
convergence lines and surface heterogeneities,
e.g., land-breeze (see question 2) - Divergence below the LFC can counter low-level
convergence - Erect updrafts extend higher into ABL favoured
with equal shear on both sides of convergence
boundary - Ambient shear tilts parcel updrafts allowing more
entrainment along a longer trajectory below cloud
base - Shear acts to remove parcel from influence of
low-level convergence
9Mesoscale Circulations and Convergence Boundaries
Ziegler and Rasmussen (1998)
Crook and Klemp (2000)
Weiss et al. (2004)
10Factors Important for CI The Dryline
- Mesoscale boundary forms in AB foothills
- Associated with low-level convergence and strong
gradient in moisture focus for CI - Well documented over U.S. Plains
- Recently shown to be important for CI over the
foothills though formation mechanism may differ
from that in the Great Plains region - One of the boundaries of primary interest for
UNSTABLE
11Factors Important for CI The Dryline
Dryline observed with and without mobile
observations (Hill 2006)
Drylines and severe storm tracks from summer 2000
Dryline transect (Strong)
Taylor (2004)
12Science Question 1
- What are the contributions of ABL processes to
the initiation of deep moist convection and the
development of severe thunderstorms in the
Alberta Foothills? - What is ABL evolution especially wrt water vapour
prior to and during CI? - What is role and importance of mesoscale
convergence boundaries and circulations
associated with CI? - How are they influenced by terrain and
synoptic-scale processes? - How do they affect storms (motion, intensity,
morphology)? - What is 4D characterization of the dryline and
importance for CI? - Which storms become severe and why? How related
to boundaries associated with CI? - Are conceptual models adequate?
- How improve observational network to aid
forecasters?
13What is Needed to Resolve ABL and Other Processes
Related to CI?
N
14Supplemental Instrumentation
15 Station Configuration
- Fixed
- Mesonet stations (10-20)
- 2 radiosondes
- Tethersonde
- 2 WV radiometers
- Profiling radiometer (H2O profile)
- GPS PW sensors
- Eddy Correlation Flux Tower(s)?
- Additional Profiling Radiometer (T, RH)?
- Mobile
- AMMOS / Strong Mobile (T, P, RH)
- MARS (PW, SFC wx, profile wind, T, RH)
- 3 radiosondes
- Aircraft
- Photography
Locations of fixed radiometers, GPS sensors,
tethersonde to be determined
15Instrumentation Deployment
- Design fixed mesonet to take advantage of
existing stations and climatologically favoured
regions for CI and severe storms (includes
high-resolution lines of mesonet stations) - Two fixed sounding locations upstream (at
low-levels) of foothills catch moist advection
and pre-storm ABL - Fixed tethersonde, WV radiometers, GPS PW
sensors, profiling radiometer(?) in primary study
area near expected CI regions - Mobile surface platforms to be deployed on
intensive observation days to obtain
four-dimensional characteristics of ABL and upper
troposphere - Target mesoscale boundaries and favoured CI
regions within study area(s) - Bookend AMMOS (and Strongs) mobile mesonet
with mobile radiosondes - Attempt to place MARS near to, and east of,
observed boundaries (thermal, moisture, wind
profiles) - Supplement ground-based observations with
aircraft stepped traverses
Details of deployment will appear in UNSTABLE
field plan
16Summary
- CI depends on thermodynamic and kinematic
processes both at the surface and aloft - Water vapour availability / depth, ABL
convergence, mesoscale circulations, ambient wind
shear, the dryline all considered important for
CI in the AB foothills - These features are not resolved by existing
observation networks uncertainty remains with
respect to their role and significance for CI in
the region on varying spatial and temporal scales - Have posed science questions to address these
uncertainties in the context of the UNSTABLE
field experiment - Targeted, high-resolution measurements are
required to resolve processes associated with CI
and severe thunderstorm development - UNSTABLE will include fixed and mobile surface,
upper-air and profiling measurements central to
the success of UNSTABLE will be the ATMOS / AMMOS
mesonet stations and aircraft measurements