Abstract
Two-dimensional numerical simulations were performed to investigate the nature of tropospheric internal gravity waves of the type which are observed to occur above active thermal convection over an unstable boundary layer. These gravity waves are believed to be excited by a combination of pure thermal forcing and by the boundary layer eddies and cumulus clouds acting as obstacles to the flow in the presence of mean environmental wind shear. Large amplitude internal gravity waves were obtained in the simulations with amplitudes and horizontal scales similar to the 12 June 1984 aircraft observations over western Nebraska. This was a day with strong wind shear in the lowest 3 km above the ground and with scattered cumulus clouds topping the boundary layer. The simulations show that there is significant difference between the early time solutions (as might be predicted by linear theory) and late time solutions for the boundary layer eddy structure. A layer interaction occurs in which gravity waves of the stable layer are excited by the boundary layer convection. There is evidence to suggest that this layer interaction occurs both with and without shear but that it is stronger in the presence of low-level shear. Results indicate that shear (or the obstacle) effect is a more efficient generator of gravity waves than is the pure thermal forcing. The simulations show that the gravity waves initially forced by the boundary layer eddies lead to a feedback mechanism that acts to organize the boundary layer eddies and the cumulus convection. The solutions suggest that the character of fair weather convection (moist or dry) is a non-local problem involving at times the full depth of the troposphere. The clouds produced in the simulations have very little influence on the wave field or boundary layer eddy structure as they are relatively small cumuli. On the other hand the clouds are strongly influenced by the interactions between the wave and eddy fields. Upshear growth of cumulus clouds similar to that which is frequently observed in nature is reproduced in the simulations. The development of feeder (‘feeder’ is used here in a dynamical sense only) clouds on (typically) the upshear side of the cloud is found to be a result of the interaction between the gravity wave field and the dry and moist convection. The relative phase velocity between the gravity waves and the cloud plays a crucial role in determining the character of the cumulus cloud growth in the present simulations. These simulations suggest that the dynamics both internal and external to the boundary of a cumulus cloud is a complicated mix between wave dynamics and the usually considered convection dynamics. A brief discussion of the implications of the present results to cloud boundary baroclinic instability dynamics is also presented.
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More From: Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
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