Title: Aircraft Observations of the Hurricane Boundary Layer Structure
1- Aircraft Observations of the Hurricane Boundary
Layer Structure
Jun Zhang Collaborators William Drennan, Peter
Black, Jeffrey French, Frank Marks, Kristina
Katsaros, and Susanne Lehner
National Hurricane Center, Feb. 6th, 2009
2- Hurricane intensity is related to
- Environmental control
- Ocean feedback
- Cloud Microphysics
-
- Physical processes near the air-sea interface
across the boundary layer -
- The Hurricane boundary layer is the least
well observed part in a storm till now
3Outline
- Background and Motiviations
- Experiment and Instrumentation
- Results 1) turbulent fluxes and parameterization
- 2) vertical structure of
turbulence - 3) Turbulent Kinetic Energy
(TKE) budget - 4) Boundary layer rolls
- 5) Hurricane boundary layer
height - 4. Summary and Future Work.
4Depiction of the ABL processes
------- Boundary layer height
http//www.esrl.noaa.gov/research/themes/pbl/
5Why is the boundary layer so important in
hurricanes?
- The boundary layer provides a powerful coupling
between the primary circulation (the azimuthal
component) and the secondary circulation (the
radial-vertical, or in-up-and-out component). - Moisture enters a hurricane from the sea surface
and its radial distribution is strongly
influenced by that of the boundary layer winds. - The boundary layer dynamics and thermodynamics
determine the vertical transport of moisture and
angular momentum out of the boundary layer. - The radial distribution of these quantities on
leaving the layer exerts a strong constraint on
the radial distribution of buoyancy.
Courtesy of Roger Smith
6- Emanuel (1995)
- Axisymmetric model
- Slab boundary layer
- Use gradient wind
- Bulk BL parameterization
- CD drag coefficient (momentum)
- CK enthalpy coefficient
CK/CD 1.2 1.5 CK/CD gt 0.75
7Surface Fluxes and Parameterizations
8MM5 simulation of Hurricane Bob (1991)
Braun and Tao, 2000
Sensitivity to boundary-layer parameterization
? Skillful prediction of intensity change
requires an accurate representation of the
boundary layer and parameterization of surface
fluxes.
9EC Data from 8 field experiments AGILE, AWE,
ETCH,GASEX,HEXOS,RASEX, SHOWEX, SWADE, WAVES
(4322 pts). Smith (1980)
Donelan et al. 2004
O AGILE (Donelan Drennan 1995) X HEXOS
(DeCosmo et al 1996) ? GASEX
(McGillis et al 2004) SOWEX (Banner et al
1999) ? SWADE (Katsaros et al 1993)
Powell et al. 2003
COARE-3 --- COARE 2.5
10Prior to 2003, the only boundary layer in-situ
turbulence structure measurement was conducted by
Moss (1978) in the periphery of marginal
hurricane Eloise (1975) at surface wind speed of
about 20 m/s.
Moss (1978)
Zi
112002 3 Test flights in Hurricanes Edouard,
Isidore, and Lili2003 6 flights in Hurricanes
Fabian and Isabel2004 Flights at top of
boundary layer, only 2 flux flights in
Hurricanes Frances and JeanneBlack et al. 2007
BAMSDrennan et al. 2007 JASFrench et al. 2007
JASZhang et al. 2008 GRL
The Coupled Boundary Layer Air-sea Transfer
Experiment (CBLAST)
12- N43RF flux instrumentation
- - BAT (Best Aircraft Turbulence) probe on boom
- - Rosemount Gust probes in radome and fuselage
- - Inertial navigation, GPS systems in fuselage
- - LICOR LI-7500 hygrometer (modified)
- - Rosemount temperature sensors
- - PRT5 radiometer for sea surface temperature
- - Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer (SFMR)
? BAT
?LICOR head
13CBLAST STEPPED DESCENTS
Black lines represent the flux runs Typical
length of a flux run is 24 km
108 flux runs for momentum flux measurement 42
flux runs for enthalpy flux measurement
14Vertical profiles of Mean Flow(Data are from
measurements during Sept. 12th 2003)
To Eye
zi
15Time series for a typical flux run
pitch
(40 Hz data)
16Spectral Analysis
17Drag Coefficients
Smith (1992) ------ Large and Pond (1980) ------
Smith (1980) ------- COARE 3.0 CBLAST LOW
(o) Powell et al. (2003) --- Donelan et al.
(2004) ----
CBLAST Data LF (?) RF (?) LR (X) RR()
18Dalton Numbers
CE10N ltw'q'gt/U10N(qsat-q10N)
19Stanton Numbers
? CBLAST X HEXOS
20Zhang, Black, French and Drennan, 2008 First
direct measurements of enthalpy flux in the
hurricane boundary layer the CBLAST results.
Geophys. Res. Lett., 35, L14813,
oi10.1029/2008GL034374.
? CBLAST X HEXOS
-------- COARE 3.0 -------- Emanuels threshold
CK/CD 0.63 lt 0.75
21Fk (W m-2)
u (m s-1)
Cdx1000
Ckx1000
22Vertical Structure of Momentum flux
Moss (1978)
23Profiles of humidity and sensible heat fluxes
24TKE Budget
I II
III IV V
TKE
I Shear production II Buoyancy III
Turbulent transport IV Pressure transport V
Rate of dissipation
25Turbulent Kinetic Energy Budget
Lenschow et al. (1980)
Nicholls (1985)
Zhang et al. 2009 JAS accepted
26Hurricane Boundary Layer Rolls
Morrison et al., 2005
27 RADARSAT SAR imagery during Hurricane Isidore
Zhang et al. 2008 BLM
28- Boundary Layer Flight in Hurricane Isidore
29Wavelet Analysis
30Momentum Flux
Zhang et al. 2008 BLM
--- leg A --------- legs B C D
leg E
Wavelength 950 m
----- alongwind leg --- crosswind leg
31Sensible Heat Flux
Zhang et al. 2008 BLM
--- leg A --------- legs B C D
leg E
32Hurricane Hugo (1989)
Marks et al. 2008 MWR
33A schematic of the hurricane boundary layer
height
z
Vr0
hinflow
h
Vr
hi
zi
Max wind radius
?
Eye radius
Vr -10 m s-1
rmw
re
r
r150 km
34Mean Wind Speed Profiles
WL150 is the mean wind of the lowest 150 m data
Height of maximum wind speed
35Mean Potential Temperature Profiles
mixed layer height zi
Stable layer Transition Layer Mixed Layer
?? (zi) 1K
36Mean Radial Wind Profiles
Inflow layer height Vr 0
37Where is the top of the hurricane boundary layer?
Entrainment ?
?
hinflow
Vr0
?
?
hVmax
z
zi
Max wind radius
Eye radius
800 Wm-2
rmw
re
r
r500 km
r150 km
38Summary
- 1. Bulk parameterizations of momentum and
enthalpy fluxes were extended up to near
hurricane force. - 2. The vertical structure of turbulence and
fluxes are presented for the boundary layer
between the outer rainbands. - The boundary layer height defined from the
turbulent flux profiles is nearly twice the
height of the mixed layer defined from the
thermodynamic profiles. - Turbulent kinetic energy budget indicates that
the advection term is important. - Boundary layer rolls rescale the sensible heat
flux transport and enhance the momentum flux.
39Future Possible Hurricane Boundary Layer
Turbulence and flux Observations
- P3 aircraft flying low again?
- GPS dropsonde
- Remote sensing (Radar, Lidar, etc.)
- Aerosonde with turbulence instrumentation
- Buoy designed to sustain hurricane force
-
40End
Thanks!
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45Hurricane boundary layer depth
- Deardorff (1972) zi c u/f
- Anthes and Chang (1978)
- zi
- Kepert (2001)
-
is Inertial instability parameter
Consistent with Anthes and Chang (1978) and
Kepert (2001)