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The Subtropical Sea Breeze
John W. Nielsen-Gammon Texas A&M University
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Outline Preconceptions Observations Rotunno (1983) Theory
Niino (1987) Theory Reconciling with Observations Modeling Implications
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Preconceptions At what time of day (local standard time) does the sea breeze attain maximum strength? 00 LST (midnight) 12 LST (noon) Need more 03 LST 15 LST info 06 LST (sunrise) 18 LST (sunset) Don’t know 09 LST 21 LST
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Land/Sea Breeze, Israel Coast
Peak sea breeze: 5 PM SEA LAND Source: Newman, 1977, JAS Latitude: 31.6 N Peak land breeze: 5 AM
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Standard Conceptual Model
from Hsu 1970 MWR
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Observations Coordinate definitions: u: along-coast, land to left
v: toward land
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Surface Stations
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SRST2: C-MAN platform, Sabine, Texas
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SRST2 ubar,vbar (yellow, cyan); u’, v’ (blue, violet): August 2000
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42002, August 2000
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Sea Breeze Land Breeze Sunset Midnight Sunrise Midday Sunset
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Rotunno (1983) Linear theory Horizontal scale of sea breeze
Dependence on f
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The Coriolis Force Caused by Earth’s rotation
Accelerates air parcels to the right (in NH) of their current motion Force proportional to velocity If no other forces, parcel will trace a complete circle Force stronger (& circle faster) at high lats
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Equations of Motion Linear, hydrostatic, boussinesq
ut – f v = - px + Fx vt + f u = + Fy wt – b = -pz + Fz bt + N2 w = Q ux + wz = 0
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Reduce to one equation for the two-dimensional streamfunction:
N2 yxx + yzztt + f2 yzz = - Qx Assume e-iwt time dependence: N2 yxx + (f2 – w2) yzz = - Qx
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N2 yxx + (f2 – w2) yzz = - Qx Elliptic if (f2 – w2) > 0
Latitudes greater than 30o Solution decays with distance from forcing Aspect ratio L = NH/ (f2 – w2)1/2
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Rotunno model: imposed heating
-2 2 Sea Land
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Streamfunction at midday: high latitudes [(f2 – w2) > 0]
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N2 yxx + (f2 – w2) yzz = - Qx Hyperbolic (wavelike solutions) if (f2 – w2) < 0 – within 30o of equator
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Streamfunction at dawn: low latitudes [(f2 – w2) < 0]
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Streamfunction at midday: low latitudes [(f2 – w2) < 0]
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Streamfunction at sunset: low latitudes [(f2 – w2) < 0]
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Why the difference? Role of f as damping at high latitudes
Undamped oscillations at low latitudes
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Magic Latitudes (f2 – w2)1/2 is normally of order 7x10-5
For typical H and N, L = 150 km At 30+/- 1 degrees, (f2 – w2)1/2 is of order 2x10-5 For typical H and N, L = 500 km
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Phase relationships Inviscid case north of 30: In phase with heating
Inviscid case south of 30: Out of phase with heating Add viscosity: In quadrature with heating
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Phase relationships Time of strongest sea breeze Increasing friction
midnight Time of strongest sea breeze sunset Low latitudes High latitudes midday Increasing friction
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Niino (1987) Heating produced by vertical diffusion
Prandtl number unity All vertical diffusion terms remain at leading order Really ugly equation
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Niino (1987) {(d/dt – k d2/dz2) * [(d/dt – n d2/dz2)2 + f2]} d2b/dz2 +
N2(d/dt – n d2/dz2) d2b/dx2 = 0 n=momentum diff., k = heat diff. (reduces to Rotunno if k = n = 0)
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Niino (1987) Vertical scale: (k/w)1/2
Horizontal scale: N/w (k/w)1/2 F(f) F(f) ranges from 0.7 (high latitudes) to 2.2 (low latitudes)
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Niino with friction: maximum onshore wind
High latitude Equator 30 North
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Niino without friction: maximum onshore wind
0 North 29.7 North 15 North 50 North
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Compromise (2000) Theory Viscosity matters in neutral boundary layer
Viscosity important over land, not water Internal inertia-gravity waves extending to sea Seaward scale much larger than landward scale
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Summary Observations show sea-breeze-like oscillations extending well into Gulf of Mexico Observations show wavelike wind oscillations above the boundary layer over land
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Summary (continued) Inviscid theory predicts large horizontal extent near 30o Viscous theory predicts limited (100 km) horizontal extent everywhere Compromise theory: Viscous wavemaker over land Nearly inviscid waves over water
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Implications for Atmosphere
Enhanced heat/moisture fluxes over water Diurnally-dependent transport over Gulf Layered diurnal dispersion of plumes over land Away from sea breeze front, “simple” oscillatory behavior
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Implications for Air Quality Modeling
Model must resolve freely-propagating waves within and above the boundary layer Vertical grid spacing? Horizontal grid boundaries? Spinup time?
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Future Directions Horizontal structure with profiler data
Time-dependent viscosity over land Full MM5 simulation of sea breeze PBL parameterization? Vertical resolution? Role of basin shape?
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Acknowledgments Supported by the state of Texas through the Texas Air Research Center (but what I said is not necessarily what they would say) Profiler data: Dick McNider Buoy data: National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration
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