Title: Lifting by cold pools (RKW theory)
1Lifting by cold pools(RKW theory)
2Very rapid recap of CAPE CIN(with some skewed,
qualitative images)
3Environmental temperature profile
Average environmental lapse rate 6.5C/km in
tropopshere
4Lift a parcel
Subsaturated parcel cools _at_ DALR, RH rises
5Saturation reached (LCL)
Note parcel negatively buoyant a push needed
6Further lifting beyond LCL
MALR varies with height
Saturated parcel cools _at_ MALR
7Positively buoyant above LFC
Parcel needed push to get to LFC
8Cloud top (TOC) where buoyancy vanishes
Parcel runs out of vapor and/or reaches
stratosphere
9Convective available potential energy (CAPE)
Energy reservoir feeds strong storm
updrafts positive area
10Convective inhibition (CIN)
Parcel must overcome inhibition to reach LFC --
needs a push
11Shear
12Midlatitudes westerly wind increases with height
in troposphere
Principal reason its colder to the north
13Vertical shear creates spin
14Vertical shear creates spin
Storm moves faster than lower tropospheric winds
15Storm-relative view
Storm moves faster than lower tropospheric winds
16Shear should force downshear tilt
Storm would rain into its own inflow, not a good
situation
17A better storm configuration
Storm avoids raining into its own inflow
18A better storm configuration
Large amount of CAPE, low LFC, little CIN A good
recipe
19A downshear-tilting storm
Storm rains into its own inflow, cooling it
20A downshear-tilting storm
LFC rises, much less CAPE, much more CIN
21A downshear-tilting storm
Unviable and wont live long
22Shear bad (for storm) but it can be good
thing too
Cold pool good (lifting) but it can be bad
thing too
23Horizontal vorticity
- Spin in vertical plane
- Spin axis is horizontal
- Right-hand rule determines sign
- Positive horizontal vorticity illustrated
CW spin positive CCW spin negative
24Creating horizontal vorticity
- Vertical wind shear
- Horizontal temperature gradients
25Creating horizontal vorticity
- Vertical wind shear
- Horizontal temperature gradients
26Creating horizontal vorticity
- Vertical wind shear
- Horizontal temperature gradients
27Creating horizontal vorticity
- Vertical wind shear
- Horizontal temperature gradients
Here CCW spin negative vorticity
28Horizontal vorticity ?
- Boussinesq equations, cross-derive to obtain
- where
29An isolated warm bubble
8 km
16 km
30with wind vectors
Vorticity tendency largest here (largest
horizontal B gradient)
Vorticity largest here
Temperature gradients horizontal vorticity CCW,
CW spins balanced
31Add on some shear?
Add shear to picture -- biased to CW
spin Thermal (cloud) would tilt downshear
32Storm cold pools make negative horizontal
vorticity
33Effect of cold pool vorticity
Air gets lifted but not very well By itself,
cold pool vorticity bad for storm
34Now consider shear vorticity
By itself, shear vorticity is also bad, forcing
downshear tilt
35Now consider shear vorticity
But two wrongs can make a right
36Vorticity balance
Vorticities balanced - get deep lifting, strong
storm
37The optimal state
Optimal strength -- as close to vertical as
possible, without raining into its own inflow
38RKW vorticity balance theory(Rotunno et al. 1988)
39RKWs optimal state where ?u wind speed
difference over cold pool depth (proxy for
vertical shear) c storm speed (proxy for pool
negative vorticity)
Weisman and Rotunno (2004)
40Recap
- Sources of horizontal vorticity vertical shear
horizontal temperature gradients - By itself, CW shear vorticity weakens
(multicell-type) storms - Forces downshear tilt, rain into inflow
- By itself, CCW cold pool vorticity weakens
storms - Provides lifting but its not very deep
- Not an unalloyed good
- Opposing vorticities can balance to produce
optimal storm strength (Goldilocks!) - Cold pool vorticity stronger - leans upshear
- Shear vorticity stronger - leans downshear
41Weisman and Rotunno (2004)
RKW emphasized surface-based vertical shear over
cold pool depth. WR2004 addresses objections to
RKW theory by exploring (ii) Shear shifted above
cold pool (iii) Shear extending above cold pool
42No shear case
Observe vertical deformation of tracer lines
43Add some westerly shearover cold pool depth
Max lifting case
upshear side -- downshear side
44Same shear, but elevated
A lot less total lift above x2
45Same shear, deeper layer
Less total lifting - more downshear tilt
46Demonstration
Nice multicell storm Sequence of short-lived
updrafts strong cold pool Storm leans
upshear Cold pool vorticity stronger than shear
vorticity
47Demonstration
Take this storm and destroy its cold pool by
turning off evaporation cooling Cold pool, its
lifting and its vorticity go away What happens?
48Demonstration
49Another demonstration(cold pool collapse in very
strong shear)