Nocturnal Low-Level Jet Characteristics Over Kansas During Cases-99

被引:1
作者
R.M. Banta
R. K. Newsom
J. K. Lundquist
Y. L. Pichugina
R. L. Coulter
L. Mahrt
机构
[1] Environmental Technology Laboratory/NOAA,Program in Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
[2] Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere,College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences
[3] University of Colorado,undefined
[4] Argonne National Laboratory,undefined
[5] Oregon State University,undefined
来源
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2002年 / 105卷
关键词
CASES-99; Lidar; Low–level jet; Nocturnal boundary layer; Stable boundary layer; Wind profiles;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Characteristics and evolution of the low-level jet (LLJ)over southeastern Kansas were investigated during the 1999 Cooperative Surface-AtmosphereExchange Study (CASES–99) field campaign with an instrument complement consisting of ahigh-resolution Doppler lidar (HRDL), a 60 m instrumented tower, and a triangle of Dopplermini-sodar/profiler combinations. Using this collection of instrumentation we determined thespeed UX, height ZX and direction DX of the LLJ. We investigate here the frequencyof occurrence, the spatial distribution, and the evolution through the night, of these LLJcharacteristics. The jet of interest in this study was that which generates the shear and turbulencebelow the jet and near the surface. This was represented by the lowest wind maximum.We found that this wind maximum, which was most often between 7 and 10 m s‐1,was often at or just below 100 m above ground level as measured by HRDL at the CASEScentral site. Over the 60 km profiler–sodararray, the topography varied by ∼100 m. The wind speed anddirection were relatively constant over this distance (with some tendency for strongerwinds at the highest site), but ZX was more variable. ZX was occasionally about equal at allthree sites, indicating that the jet was following the terrain, but more often it seemed to berelatively level, i.e., at about the same height above sea level. ZX was also more variable thanUX in the behaviour of the LLJ with time through the night, and on some nights $UX wasremarkably steady. Examples of two nights with strong turbulence below jet level were furtherinvestigated using the 60 m tower at the main CASES–99 site. Evidence of TKE increasing withheight and downward turbulent transport of TKE indicates that turbulence was primarilygenerated aloft and mixed downward, supporting the upside–down boundary layer notion in thestable boundary layer.
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 252
页数:31
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Elastic lidar measurements of summer nocturnal low level jet events over Baltimore, Maryland
    Delgado, Ruben
    Rabenhorst, Scott D.
    Demoz, Belay B.
    Hoff, Raymond. M.
    JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY, 2015, 72 (3-4) : 311 - 333
  • [22] Elastic lidar measurements of summer nocturnal low level jet events over Baltimore, Maryland
    Ruben Delgado
    Scott D. Rabenhorst
    Belay B. Demoz
    Raymond. M. Hoff
    Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry, 2015, 72 : 311 - 333
  • [23] Submeso Motions and Intermittent Turbulence Across a Nocturnal Low-Level Jet: A Self-Organized Criticality Analogy
    Daniela Cava
    Luca Mortarini
    Umberto Giostra
    Otavio Acevedo
    Gabriel Katul
    Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 2019, 172 : 17 - 43
  • [24] On the Turbulence in the Upper Part of the Low-Level Jet: An Experimental and Numerical Study
    L. Conangla
    J. Cuxart
    Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 2006, 118 : 379 - 400
  • [25] The Relationships among Wind, Horizontal Pressure Gradient, and Turbulent Momentum Transport during CASES-99
    Sun, Jielun
    Lenschow, Donald H.
    Mahrt, Larry
    Nappo, Carmen
    JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 2013, 70 (11) : 3397 - 3414
  • [26] On the turbulence in the upper part of the low-level jet: An experimental and numerical study
    Conangla, L.
    Cuxart, J.
    BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 2006, 118 (02) : 379 - 400
  • [27] A Conceptual View on Inertial Oscillations and Nocturnal Low-Level Jets
    Van de Wiel, B. J. H.
    Moene, A. F.
    Steeneveld, G. J.
    Baas, P.
    Bosveld, F. C.
    Holtslag, A. A. M.
    JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 2010, 67 (08) : 2679 - 2689
  • [28] An Overview of Low-Level Jet Winds and Corresponding Mixed Layer Depths During PECAN
    Carroll, Brian J.
    Demoz, Belay B.
    Delgado, Ruben
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2019, 124 (16) : 9141 - 9160
  • [29] Estimation of orographically induced wave drag in the stable boundary layer during the CASES-99 experimental campaign
    Steeneveld, Gert-Jan
    Nappo, Carmen J.
    Holtslag, Albert A. M.
    ACTA GEOPHYSICA, 2009, 57 (04): : 857 - 881
  • [30] Impact of the Nocturnal Low-Level Jet and Orographic Waves on Turbulent Motions and Energy Fluxes in the Lower Atmospheric Boundary Layer
    Roy, Sayahnya
    Sentchev, Alexei
    Schmitt, Francois G.
    Augustin, Patrick
    Fourmentin, Marc
    BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 2021, 180 (03) : 527 - 542