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Meso- - Scale and Meso- -Scale Convective Systems

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Title: Meso- - Scale and Meso- -Scale Convective Systems


1
Meso- - Scale and Meso- -Scale Convective
Systems
2
Mesoscale 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?

3
Organization 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

4
Organization 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

5
Organization Mechanisms(continued)
  • Mesoscale basis of self-organization (continued)
  • Thermodynamic Process (engine) A cyclic
    thermodynamic process used to describe
    organization

6
Original 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)

7
Real 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)

8
Real 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.

9
Real CISK(continued)
  • There is still a role of the traditional CISK
    concept to understand individual components of a
    much more complex system.

10
Frictional 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.

11
Frictional 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.

12
Traditional 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.

13
Density 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

14
Slant-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

15
Slant-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.

16
Slant-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.

17
Slant-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.

18
Slant-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).

19
Slant-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.

20
Slant-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.

21
Conditional 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

22
Convective - 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.

23
lt C - S I
lt C S I
24
Organization 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

25
Linear 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)

26
Middle Latitude Squall Line
27
Prefrontal 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

28
Middle 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.

29
Middle 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.

30
Middle 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
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