Title: ---%20Introduction%20to%20Geophysical%20Fluid%20Dynamics
1--- Introduction to Geophysical Fluid Dynamics
Ch. 7 Fundamentals of Atmospheric/Ocean Modeling
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4- Variables and Units
- Independent Variables
- Values are independent of each other
- x increases eastward
- y increases northward
- z increases upward
- t time
- Later we can use other coordinate systems
- p decreases upward
- latitude, longitude
5- Variables and Units
- Dependent Variables
- Values depend on other variables
- wind speeds
- u gt 0 for eastward motion
- v gt 0 for northward motion
- w gt 0 for upward motion
-
- Temperature T T(x,y,z,t)
- Pressure p p(x,y,z,t)
- Density ? ?(x,y,z,t)
6Part II - The International Unit System (SI)
So, for Length 1000 m 1 km 1m 1000 mm And
so forth. Much simpler!
7As of 2005, only three countries hang on to the
messy Imperial Units, Myanmar, Liberia, and the
United States.
8Part II - The International Unit System (SI)
SI prefixes -- Factor Name Symbol 1012 tera T 10
9 giga G 106 mega M 103 kilo k 102 hecto h 101 dek
a da Factor Name Symbol 10-1 deci d 10-2 ce
nti c 10-3 milli m 10-6 micro µ 10-9 nano n 10-12
pico p
SI base units Base quantity Name Symbol length
meter m mass
kilogram kg time
second s temperature kelvin K
SI derived units Derived quantity Name
Symbol area square
meter m2 volume cubic
meter m3 speed, velocity meter per
second m/s acceleration meter per second
squared m/s2 mass density kilogram per cubic
meter kg/m3 specific volume cubic meter per
kilogram m3/kg
9 In meteorology/ocean, we almost always use SI
units, journals require it.
Force - Newtons (kg m/s) Pressure - We still use
millibars (mb) 1 mb 100 Pa 1 hPa (PASCALS
N/m2) (hpa hecto-pascal) Pressure force /
unit area Must use correct (SI) units in
calculations Temperatures - Always use Kelvin in
calculations T(K) T( C ) 273
10Dimensions and Units All physical quantities can
be expressed in terms of basic dimensions
Mass M (Kg) Length L (m) Time T
(s) Temperature K (K)
Velocity Distance / Time, so it has
dimensions L/T, or m/s
Acceleration Velocity / Time, so it has
dimensions L/T2, or m/s2
Force Mass x Acceleration, so it has
dimensions M LT-2, or Kg m/s2
Pressure, density
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25Pressure GradientForce(PGF)
- pressure gradient high pressure ? low pressure
- pressure differences exits due to unequal
heating of Earths surface - spacing between isobars indicates intensity of
gradient - flow is perpendicular to isobars
Figure 6.7
26Pressure Gradient Force (PGF)
Figure 6.8a
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41- Coriolis effect seen on a rotating platform, as 1
person throws a ball to another person.
42Coriolis Effect
- Shell fired in N. Hem. deflects right.
- In S. Hem., it deflects left.
- Coriolis (1835) deflection due to Earths
rotation - Consider object moving northward in N. Hem.
- As Earth rotates, speed of surface is greatest at
Equator and 0 at Poles.
43- Obj. A has greater eastward speed than B.
- gt When A is moved northward, it ends up at X,
ahead of B. - gt Appears to be a force deflecting the obj. to
the right (Coriolis force) - Obj. moves southward (in N.Hem.) ends up further
west gt Coriolis deflection to right. - Consider obj. moving eastward
- It moves faster than Earth in circular orbit
- gt incr. centrifugal force
- gt obj. pushed away from Earths spin axis.
44- Obj. moving westward is deflected poleward gt
deflection to right (N.Hem.) - Mathematically E-W and N-S movements can be
treated in same way gt obj. moving in any horiz.
direction deflects to the right in N. Hem., and
to the left in S. Hem. - Coriolis effect 0 at Equator, max. at Poles.
- Strength of Coriolis force proportional to speed
of obj.
45The Coriolis Effect
- objects in the atmosphere are influenced by the
Earths rotation - Rotation of Earth is counter-clockwise
- results in an apparent deflection (relative to
surface) - deflection to the right Northern Hemisphere
(left, S. Hemisphere) - Greatest at the poles, 0 at the equator
- Increases with speed of moving object
- CE changes direction not speed
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54Geostrophic balance
- P diff. gt pressure gradient force (PGF)
- gt air parcel moves gt Coriolis force
- Geostrophy balance between PGF Coriolis force
.
55- Approx. geostrophic balance for large scale flow
away from Eq. - Q Why no geostrophic balance at Equator? A No
Coriolis force at Eq. - In N. Hem., geostrophic wind blow to the right of
PGF (points from high to low P) - In S. Hem., geostrophic wind to left of PGF.
56- Converging contours of const. pressure (isobars)
gt faster flow gt incr. CF PGF
Get geostrophic wind pattern from isobars
57Cyclone Anticyclone
- Large low pressure cells are cyclones, (high
pressure cells anticyclones) - Air driven towards the centre of a cyclone by PGF
gets deflected by Coriolis to spiral around the
centre.
58- Difference between PGF Coriolis (CF) is the
centripetal force needed to keep parcel in orbit.
59Convergence divergence
- Cyclone has convergence near ground but
divergence at upper level. - Anticyclone divergence near ground, convergence
at upper level.
60Pressure Gradient Force Coriolis Force
Geostrophic Wind
61Upper Atmosphere Winds
- upper air moving from areas of higher to areas of
lower pressure undergo Coriolis deflection - air will eventually flow parallel to height
contours as the pressure gradient force balances
with the Coriolis force - this geostrophic flow (wind) may only occur in
the free atmosphere (no friction) - stable flow with constant speed and direction
62Supergeostrophic flow
Subgeostrophic flow
63- Geostrophic flow too simplistic ? PGF is rarely
uniform, height contours curve and vary in
distance - wind still flows parallel to contours HOWEVER
continuously changing direction (and experiencing
acceleration) - for parallel flow to occur pressure imbalance
must exist between the PGF and CE ? Gradient Flow
- Two specific types of gradient flow
- Supergeostrophic High pressure systems, CE gt PGF
(to enable wind to turn), air accelerates - Subgeostrophic Low pressure systems, PGF gt CE,
air decelerates - supergeostrophic and subgeostrophic conditions
lead to airflow parallel to curved height
contours
64Friction
- factor at Earths surface ? slows wind
- varies with surface texture, wind speed, time of
day/year and atmospheric conditions - Important for air within 1.5 km of the surface,
the planetary boundary layer - Because friction reduces wind speed it also
reduces Coriolis deflection - Friction above 1.5 km is negligible
- Above 1.5 km the free atmosphere
65Friction
- Ground friction slows wind gt CF weakens.
- CFfriction balances PGF.
- Surface wind tilted toward low p region.
66Pressure Gradient Coriolis Friction Forces
Surface Wind
Figure 6.8c
67Cyclones, Anticyclones, Troughs and Ridges
- 4 broad pressure areas in Northern hemisphere
- High pressure areas (anticyclones) ? clockwise
airflow in the Northern Hemisphere (opposite flow
direction in S. Hemisphere) - Characterized by descending air which warms
creating clear skies - Low pressure areas (cyclones) ? counterclockwise
airflow in N. Hemisphere (opposite flow in S.
Hemisphere) - Air converges toward low pressure centers,
cyclones are characterized by ascending air which
cools to form clouds and possibly precipitation - In the upper atmosphere, ridges correspond to
surface anticyclones while troughs correspond to
surface cyclones
68Surface and upper atmosphere air flow around high
pressure systems (anticyclones)
69Surface and upper atmosphere air flow around low
pressure systems (cyclones)