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Page 1© Crown copyright 2006 Boundary layer mechanisms in extra-tropical cyclones Bob Beare
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Page 2© Crown copyright 2006 Motivation Boundary layer significantly reduces the depth of a cyclone (~50% reduction in growth rates, Valdes and Hoskins 1988). Mechanism provides framework for understanding model changes. Drag Ekman pumping typically used at Met Office. Conceptual models. Recent research (Stephen Belcher, NWP seminar July 2005) indicates that potential vorticity (PV) should be considered also. Highlights warm sector and warm conveyor belt. Aim: compare Ekman and PV approaches.
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Page 3© Crown copyright 2006 Boundary layer structure in extra-tropical cyclone L Potential temperature Height Warm sector (stable) Cold sector (unstable)
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Page 4© Crown copyright 2006 Ekman pumping Boundary layer stress h u*2u*2 Geostrophic wind Coriolis Pressure gradient drag Momentum balance & continuity L = horizontal scale f 0 =Coriolis parameter Convergent wind L u * =friction velocity
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Page 5© Crown copyright 2006 Ekman pumping Convergence from boundary layer drag ascent (Ekman pumping) spin down by vortex squashing Distribution of friction velocity Ekman pumping Weakness: momentum budget only, what about thermodynamics?
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Page 6© Crown copyright 2006 Potential vorticity Potential temperature black, PV anomaly red, winds orange Conservation when no heating or friction Inversion (balance condition and boundary conditions) Potential temperature gradient Absolute vorticity Increasing
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Page 7© Crown copyright 2006 Potential vorticity in boundary layer Heating from boundary layer: Surface heat fluxes Boundary layer stress: Ekman pumping contribution Horizontal potential temperature gradients All terms dependent on gradients in potential temperature. Weakness: what about regions with zero gradient of potential temperature (unstable layers)?
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Page 8© Crown copyright 2006 Summary Ekman pumping Potential vorticity Friction velocity Horizontal scale Coriolis paramter Potential temperature gradient Absolute vorticity
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Page 9© Crown copyright 2006 Model set up Met Office Unified model Idealised: dry, only boundary layer scheme and dynamics operating. Why idealised? Isolate boundary layer-dynamics interaction, control over jets and sea surface temperature, framework for interpreting global model or NAE. Met Office boundary layer scheme: separate treatment of stable and unstable boundary layers. Limited area 18000 km x 9000 km, 45 km horizontal resolution, 10 minute time step.
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Page 10© Crown copyright 2006 Basic state
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Page 11© Crown copyright 2006 Triggering cyclogensis Near surface Potential temperature Upper level trough Tropopause PV
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Page 12© Crown copyright 2006 Idealised UM cyclone lifecycle Cold conveyor belt jet (height 1 km) Warm seclusion Shading friction velocity > 0.5 m/s
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Page 13© Crown copyright 2006 Ekman pumping vs potential vorticity Ekman pumping max 9 cm/s Boundary layer averaged PV in warm sector
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Page 14© Crown copyright 2006 Distribution with stability Unstable (cold sector)Stable (warm sector) Peak friction velocity in neutral/ unstable boundary layer h = boundary layer depth L= Obukhov length PV confined to stable boundary layers
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Page 15© Crown copyright 2006 Summary Ekman pumping and boundary layer averaged PV in distinct locations: the cold sector/ seclusion region (unstable) and warm sector (stable) respectively. Which sector of the cyclone contributes the most to the cyclone depth? Next switch off boundary layer mixing in each region.
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Page 16© Crown copyright 2006 Switching off boundary layer mixing u * 2 averaged over area of cyclone
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Page 17© Crown copyright 2006 PV inversion Horizontal section through domain PV anomaly
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Page 18© Crown copyright 2006 Comparison with global model Idealised UM Global N216 Friction velocity >0.5 m/s shaded, solid 20 m theta, dashed divides between stable and unstable BLs Stable warm sector
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Page 19© Crown copyright 2006 Sensitivity to “operational” boundary layer and dynamics changes PS 10 changes (stability dependence) Interpolation in Semi-lagrangian scheme Changes which affect the neutral boundary layer
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Page 20© Crown copyright 2006 Conclusions Unified model has been set up with an idealised jet, forming a realistic cyclone lifecycle. Ekman pumping and potential vorticity in different locations at occlusion: Ekman in cold sector/occlusion and PV in warm sector. Switching off mixing in unstable boundary layer (cold sector/ occlusion) has more impact than for stable boundary layer (warm sector). Operational type boundary layer mixing changes produce ~+/-2hPa change over 72 hours.
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Page 21© Crown copyright 2006 Future work Invert warm sector PV to determine its impact on flow. Harmonise PV and Ekman views via bottom boundary temperatures. Revisit the role of the neutral boundary layer mixing on cyclones. CASE studentship with Reading University: Ian Boutle.
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