Abstract

Abstract Gravity-current models have been used for many years to describe the cold pools of low-level air that are generated by cumulonimbus precipitation. More recently, it has been realized that surface fluxes of heat and water vapor can be important in modifying these flows, through turbulent mixing of buoyancy by convection, and through direct modification of the cold pool buoyancy. In this paper, simple models describing the role of surface fluxes in depleting the negative buoyancy of a gravity current and the consequences of this for the flow dynamics are discussed. It is pointed out that the depletion of cold pool buoyancy by surface fluxes is analogous to the depletion of buoyancy in a turbidity current through particle sedimentation, and in one regime of parameter values the analogy is exact. This analogy allows one to use simple flow models that have been tested extensively against laboratory experiments on turbidity currents. A simple “box model” and a more sophisticated shallow water model are...

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