Title: Mountain Waves
1Mountain Waves entering the Stratosphere
2Mountain Waves entering the Stratosphere New
aircraft data analysis techniques from
T-Rex Ronald B. Smith, Bryan Woods Yale
University New Haven, Connecticut J. Jensen, W.
Cooper, J. D. Doyle, Q. Jiang, V.
Grubisic National Center for Atmospheric
Research, Boulder, CO Naval Research
Laboratory, Monterey, CA, Desert Research
Institute, Reno, NV Support from the National
Science Foundation
3Outline
- T-Rex Events (march/April 2006)
- Potential and Kinetic energy
- Sensitivity to Mountain Top Winds
- Wave spectra with altitude
- Wind and stability profiles
- Layering of Mechanical Bernoulli and Ozone
- Summary and future work
- Warning Beware of speculation. This project is
only a few weeks old.
4Global pattern of Gravity Waves in the
upper atmosphere
Microwave Limb Scanner Jiang et al
5Frequency w gt 1 m s-1 and Mean TKEgt 2 m2 s-2
Tropopause
Wind
COAMPS Climate (Doyle)
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8(No Transcript)
9(No Transcript)
10Dashed Line North Leg Solid Line South
leg
11(No Transcript)
12Note shorter wavelength 15km
13Wave Energy Components
14Each point is a leg
(times 1000)
15Each point is a flight
Threshold?
Lemoore and Visalia soundings
16Each point is a leg
17Computed from the product of theta and
displacement perturbation
18(No Transcript)
19Wave Energy Comparison
- Observation
- Vertical KE 40 J/m2
- Horizontal KE 400 J/m2
- Potential Energy 4000 J/m2 (stratosphere)
- Interpretation
- Wave energy concentrated in the stratosphere
- Observations not consistent with vertically
propagating or trapped waves rooted in the
troposphere - Horizontal KE may be enhanced by Bernoulli
layering
20Vertical Velocity Spectrum
Wavelength 20 km 10km
21RF10
9km 11km
13km
22RF10
North
South
9km 11km
13km
23RF4
North
South
9km 11km
13km
24RF4
North
South
9km 11km
13km
25Vandenberg Windspeed Profiles Big Wave
Events (RF4,5,10)
Note oscillations in the stratosphere
26Vandenberg Theta Profiles Big Wave Events (RF
4,5, 10)
27Scorer Parameter from quadratic fit
April 16, 2006
28(No Transcript)
29Conserved Variable Diagram for a racetrack
Dashed line North Leg Solid line
South Leg
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Mechanical Bernoulli Function for compressible
steady flow
Minor contributor as the A/C tries to fly at
constant pressure altitude
GPS altitude
33Dual Conserved Variable Plots(RF4 March 14,
2006 Leg _at_41kft)Ozone
Mechanical Bernoulli
using GPS altitude
34Conclusions
- The new GV aircraft is effective in monitoring
stratospheric gravity waves. - March/April 2006 was an active period for storms
hitting the Sierras - 3 large gravity wave events out of 8 Track B
flights - Wave energy is concentrated in the stratosphere
- Typical wavelength there is 15km
- Wave location suggests Sierra causation
- 2-D and steadiness are imperfect and variable
- Wave amplitude very sensitive to mountain top
winds - Strong wave events have similar wind environments
(with a stratospheric critical level)
35Linear Theory
- Criterion for linear waves is nearly satisfied
- Vertically propagating gravity waves should have
KE PE at each level (equipartition) - Trapped waves should have PE concentrated in the
active stable layer
36Speculations on wave dynamics
- Waves are rooted in the stratosphere
- Wave energy distributions are not consistent with
vertically propagating or conventional trapped
waves. - Potential energy is concentrated in the
stratosphere - Scorer parameter exceeds the wavenumber only in
the stratosphere - Generation mechanism unknown probably non-linear
37Free surface (Critical layer?) All the potential
energy is here.
UMT website
38Speculations on layering
- Vertical advection by waves allows diagnosis of
ozone layering and dynamic Bernoulli Layering - GPS altitude is required for Bernoulli function
determination (new!) - Bernoulli Layering correlates with ozone layering
in the stratosphere - Layering may represent isentropic interleaving of
stratospheric air masses, prior to the wave
encounter - Bernoulli layering contributes a false signal to
the horizontal wave kinetic energy.
39Future work
- Improve GV instrument calibrations
- Compute wave energy flux using GPS altitude
- Improved wave energy density computations
- Momentum fluxes
- Improved Bernoulli computations
- PV computations using Croccos theorem
- Analysis of soundings
- Compare observations with linear wave theories
- Test non-linear theories of wave regeneration,
undular bores, and critical level reflection
and/or decoupling - Determine the role of the critical level
40(No Transcript)
41(Smith, 1985)
42Other aircraft profiles Ozone Air density Water
Vapor
Each point is a racetrack
43Each point is one racetrack
44Aircraft Profiles All Big Wave Events (RF4,5,10)
Each point is a racetrack
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47(No Transcript)