Abstract
Abstract Island thermal effects on the trail cloud band over the central North Pacific are investigated for the lee of Hawaii using satellite observations and a regional atmospheric model. The trail cloud band develops around noon and peaks in cloudiness in the early afternoon. The analysis of numerical simulations of the Kauai wake suggests that a dynamically induced convergence zone forms in the lee of Kauai and Oahu (maximum elevation at 1.5 and 1.2 km, respectively) under the trade wind flow. The island thermal effect significantly modulates the island wake and creates a diurnal cycle of development and decay in the lee cloud band. As solar radiation heats up the island from morning to afternoon, warm air moves downstream (warm advection) from the island in the wake zone, increasing the air temperature, decreasing the air pressure, and enhancing low-level wind convergence in favor of the formation of the trail clouds. Conversely the cold advection during night suppresses cloud formation in the wake. The warm advection and the convergence in the wake increase with the upstream trade wind strength, consistent with satellite observations that the cloudiness increases in the wake under strong wind conditions in the afternoon. The similarity in the trail cloud and its diurnal cycle between Kauai and Oahu suggests that the thermal wake effect is quite common. The conditions for such a thermal wake are discussed.
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