Title: Meso- - Scale and Meso- -Scale Convective Systems
1Meso- - Scale and Meso- -Scale Convective
Systems
2Mesoscale Convective System
- Grouping of deep cumulonimbus clouds merged at
the anvil forming a meso-b-scale or larger
cluster. - Defining the term MCS implies that there are
one or more dynamics mechanisms maintaining and
growing the system. - What are some of these mechanisms?
3Organization Mechanisms
- 1. Independent Mesoscale Circulation
- a) sea breeze circulation
- b) slope flow circulation
- c) land use forced thermal circulation
- 2. Independent Synoptic Circulation
- a) frontal circulation
- b) ageostrophic Jet-Streak circulation
4Organization Mechanisms
- Mesoscale basis of self-organization
- Conditional Instability of the First Kind (CIFK)
traditional conditional instability occurring on
meso-b- and meso-a-scale. - Conditional Instability of the Second Kind
(CISK) Growth and maintenance of a meso-b- and
meso-a-scale disturbance through assumed
interaction with meso-g-scale convection. - Conditional symmetric instability (CSI)
traditional linear conditional instability
applied to a rotating fluid. - Convective Inertial Instability (CII) Combined
CIFK and inertial Instability
5Organization Mechanisms(continued)
- Mesoscale basis of self-organization (continued)
- Thermodynamic Process (engine) A cyclic
thermodynamic process used to describe
organization
6Original Concept of CISK
- Unstable growth of a wave on the scale of several
cumulus (meso-b-scale and larger) in response to
latent heating - Originally applied to the growth of a hurricane
depression by Charney and Elliasen - Later applied to the growth of any wave using
linear theory (wave-CISK)
7Real CISK
- Scale-dependent feedback from cumulus to system
by - momentum forcing
- thermal forcing
- Response of system to cumulus
- Thermal field (mass) adjusts to momentum forcing
(LltLR) - Wind field (momentum) adjusts to thermal (mass)
forcing (LgtLR)
8Real CISK(continued)
- Since the heating of cumulus projects on to
multiple scales on either side of LR, a multiple
of responses to cumulus occur some gravity and
some rotational. - Because the properties of the rotational response
are so different from the gravity wave response,
the evolving system can be complex. - Normally, the system is defined by a slow
mesoscale response that defines the system
organization over time.
9Real CISK(continued)
- There is still a role of the traditional CISK
concept to understand individual components of a
much more complex system.
10Frictional CISK(Charney and Elliasen , 1962)
- Once believed to the basis of organization for a
tropical cyclone - An ensemble of cumuli is supported by mesoscale
ascent driven by Ekman pumping of cyclone vortex. - cumulus feed back to vortex strength by heating
on scale of vortex (through a cumulus
parameterization) In the linear formulation, this
major assumption is a feedback that makes linear
instability in the system appear that is used to
account for the hurricane growth.
11Frictional CISK(continued)
- Flaw
- the cumulus parameterization assumes the scale
interaction that it is trying to find. - Many hurricanes dont have cumulus!
- 20 years later, they realized that explaining the
growth of a hurricane this way was a circular
argument.
12Traditional Wave-CISK
- Upward mesoscale vertical motion driven by the
propagation of linear wave (gravity wave,
rotational wave, any wave) drives cumulus heating
that amplifies the wave. - Cumulus parameterization used to represent
cumulus feed back on wave. - Flaw cumulus parameterization assumes the scale
interaction it is trying to predict.
13Density Current Organization
- Mesoscale density current formed by combined
effect of a group of cumulus over time acts to
organize lifting along the gust front (density
current boundary). - Density current moves relatively slowly and has a
long lifetime when compared to time scale of
individual cumulus. Hence the density current
is the basis of the system organization. - But
- Density currents are a nonlinear packet of
shallow trapped internal wavesa solitary wave. - Not treated by linear theory
14Slant-Wise Convection
- Two competing stabilities present in the
atmosphere - 1. Static Stability (vertical planes)
- 2. Inertial Stability (horizontal planes)
- Stability in one plane limits instability in the
other - Both stabilities are represented by gradients of
a conservative potential
15Slant-Wise Convection(continued)
- There is free movement relative to a particular
stability along iso-lines of constant potential. - There is stability induced oscillation for
movement perpendicular to iso-lines of constant
potential.
16Slant-Wise Convection(continued)
- The potential for dry static stability is
potential temperature (q) - The potential for moist static stability
(saturated air) is equivalent potential
temperature(qe) - The potential for inertial stability is angular
momentum given by where
y is the radius from the center of rotation.
17Slant-Wise Convection(continued)
- Lines of constant (q) are usually horizontal but
dip downward (due to thermal wind balance) into
the center of a cyclonic vortex whose strength
decreases with height (warm core) and rise upward
into the center of vortex whose strength
increases with height (cold core). - Lines of constant inertial stability (m) are
usually vertical, but tilt away from the center
of a cyclonic warm core vortex because of the
thermal wind effect and vise versa in a warm core
vortex.
18Slant-Wise Convection(continue)
- Hence if we have a saturated warm core vortex,
neutral inertial upward movement (movement along
an m surface) experiences less static stability
than pure vertical upward movement . - Likewise, neutral horizontal movement along a q
surface, experiences less inertial stability than
pure horizontal movement - If vortex is strong enough momentum lines and q
lines can cross, creating static instability
along m surfaces or inertial instability along q
surfaces (isentropes).
19Slant-Wise Convection(continued)
- Hence convection erupting up the tilted momentum
surface is called slant-wise convection - Slant-wise convection is due to symmetric
instability or inertial instability relative to
the symmetric vortex that defines the radius of
curvature for the momentum lines.
20Slant-Wise Convection(continued)
- Slantwise moist convection (conditional symmetric
instability) is very important in the stratiform
regions of mesoscale convective systems - Slant wise convection may look in some ways like
vertical convection, and even be associated with
lightning, graupel, strong up and downward motion.
21Conditional Symmetric Instability
- Conditional Instability along a momentum m
surface, ie condition for slantwise moist
convection - Alternative way of looking at the same thing
Inertial Instability along a theta_e surface
22Convective - Symmetric Instability(different
from conditional symmetric instability)
- Conditional Instability (vertical) is limited in
strength by the energy consumed in forcing
horizontal motion due to symmetric stability. - Regions of weak horizontal inertial instability
can enhance vertical conditional instability.
23lt C - S I
lt C S I
24Organization of MCSs
- Linear
- Mesoscale forced
- Convergence line
- Sea breeze
- etc
- Middle Latitude Squall lines
- Frontal
- Prefrontal
- Derecho
- Progressive
- Serial (prefrontal)
- Supercell
- Tropical Squall Lines
- Circular
- MCS
- MCC
25Linear Meso-b-scale MCSs
- Linear organizations can appear for wide range of
reasons including - Wave-CISK
- CSI
- C-SI
- Barotropic converging flows
- Baroclinic forcing (density current)
26Middle Latitude Squall Line
27Prefrontal Middle Latitude Squall Line
- In its formative stage the line organizes along a
preexisting convergence line and is
three-dimensional in character, i.e. it is
composed of a linear arrangement of individual
convective cells. - The mature line becomes essentially
two-dimensional in construction and follows the
equilibrium model of sheared convection presented
earlier. - It is the mature stage of squall line MCS that
begins with a line of cumulus initiated along a
preexisting boundary such as a cold front or
local thermal circulation
28Middle Latitude Squall Line(continued)
- After several hours of down shear tilting short
lived cumulus a deep density current is built
that becomes the basis of maintenance of the
steady state quasi-two-dimensional line structure - Persistence of the quasi-steady structure can
evolve to build a strong positive vortex sheet
along a shear line at middle levels. Associated
mass adjustment to the vorticity results in low
pressure and mesoscale circulations that support
the line.
29Middle Latitude Squall Line(continued)
- Eventual shearing instability can lead to
balling up of the vortex sheet into a circular
warm core vortex aloft - Mid-level vorticity maximum can drive mesoscale
ascent in support of convection.
30Middle Latitude Squall Line(continued)
- Role of slantwise convection in trailing
stratiform anvil. - Slantwise mesoscale subsidence driven by melting
and evaporation in anvil. - Compensating upward slantwise motion are forced
helped by new condensation and ice growth along
upward motion. - Vertical circulation may build jet streak feature
at upper levels