Abstract

Abstract The devastating winds in extratropical cyclones can be assigned to different mesoscale flows. How these strong winds are transported to the surface is discussed for the Mediterranean windstorm Adrian (Vaia), which caused extensive damage in Corsica in October 2018. A mesoscale analysis based on a kilometer-scale simulation with the Meso-NH model shows that the strongest winds come from a cold conveyor belt (CCB). The focus then shifts to a large-eddy simulation (LES) for which the strongest winds over the sea are located in a convective boundary layer. Convection is organized into coherent turbulent structures in the form of convective rolls. It is their downward branches that contribute most to the nonlocal transport of strong winds from the CCB to the surface layer. On landing, the convective rolls break up because of the complex topography of Corsica. Sensitivity experiments to horizontal grid spacing show similar organization of boundary layer rolls across the resolution. A comparative analysis of the kinetic energy spectra suggests that a grid spacing of 200 m is sufficient to represent the vertical transport of strong winds through convective rolls. Contrary to LES, convective rolls are not resolved in the kilometer-scale simulation and surface winds are overestimated due to excessive momentum transport. These results highlight the importance of convective rolls for the generation of surface wind gusts and the need to better represent them in boundary layer parameterizations.

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