Abstract

AbstractThis study applies dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) to three‐dimensional simulation results of urban heat island circulation (UHIC, which is horizontal circulation) and thermals (vertical convections). The aim of this study is to revisit how these phenomena coexist based on the characteristics of temporal changes in the flow field. We used DMD to obtain the dominant spatial patterns and information on temporal changes. One of the modes of horizontal wind, which does not change temporally (no oscillation or amplification), exhibits a spatial UHIC pattern. The unique feature of this UHIC mode is that there are small‐scale striated structures (150–200 m) and large‐scale convergence. The other modes are time‐varying (oscillating and decaying) and represent smaller spatial‐scale phenomena (150–250 m), such as thermals. The frequency of each mode takes various values, some of which are lower than the lifetime of thermals in accordance with the Deardorff convective scale (~10 min). These low‐frequency modes showed striated structures similar to that observed in the UHIC modes. These results suggest that UHIC and thermals deform each other through components that vary in long temporal scales.

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