Abstract

AbstractVortex streets formed in the stratocumulus‐capped wake of mountainous islands are the atmospheric analogues of the classic Kármán vortex street observed in laboratory flows past bluff bodies. The quantitative analysis of these mesoscale unsteady atmospheric flows has been hampered by the lack of satellite wind retrievals of sufficiently high spatial and temporal resolution. Taking advantage of the cutting‐edge Advanced Baseline Imager, we derived kilometer‐scale cloud‐motion winds at 5‐min frequency for a vortex street in the lee of Guadalupe Island imaged by Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite‐16. Combined with Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer data, the geostationary imagery also provided accurate stereo cloud‐top heights. The time series of geostationary winds, supplemented with snapshots of ocean surface winds from the Advanced Scatterometer, allowed us to capture the wake oscillations and measure vortex shedding dynamics. The retrievals revealed a markedly asymmetric vortex decay, with cyclonic eddies having larger peak vorticities than anticyclonic eddies at the same downstream location. Drawing on the vast knowledge accumulated about laboratory bluff body flows, we argue that the asymmetric island wake arises from the combined effects of Earth's rotation and Guadalupe's nonaxisymmetric shape resembling an inclined flat plate at low angle of attack. However, numerical simulations will need to establish whether or not the selective destabilization of the shallow atmospheric anticyclonic eddies is caused by the same mechanisms that destabilize the deep columnar anticyclones of laboratory flows, such as three‐dimensional vertical perturbations due to centrifugal or elliptical instabilities.

Highlights

  • Flow past a circular cylinder is a classic problem in fluid dynamics

  • The current paper reports on the latest improvements in satellite retrievals of small‐scale geophysical flows enabled by the enhanced capabilities of the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) onboard the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite‐R (GOES‐R) series (Schmit et al, 2017)

  • We investigated the evolution and dynamics of an atmospheric Kármán vortex street observed by GOES‐ 16 in the lee of Guadalupe Island on 9 May 2018

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Summary

Introduction

Flow past a circular cylinder is a classic problem in fluid dynamics. In an unstratified fluid and nonrotating reference frame, the wake pattern is determined solely by the Reynolds number Re. The spaceborne measurement of atmospheric vortex street dynamics, has been out of reach, because the spatial and temporal resolution of operational satellite wind products is still too coarse to retrieve the small‐scale wake flow. We use ABI local cloud‐motion vectors over an 8‐hr daytime period, combined with two early morning ASCAT surface wind snapshots, to characterize the evolution of the vortex street wind field including the downstream advection and decay of vorticity. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of the spaceborne measurement of atmospheric vortex shedding.

Materials and Methods
MODIS and VIIRS Imagery
Meteorological Conditions
Vortex Street Geometry
Observed Vortex Shedding Mechanisms
Temporal Variation of Wind Components
Asymmetric Vortex Decay
Findings
Summary and Outlook
Full Text
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