17th Symposium on Boundary Layers and Turbulence
27th Conference on Agricultural and Forest Meteorology

J4.4

An episode of intermittent turbulence in the nightime PBL during the JORNADA field study

Carmen J. Nappo, NOAA/ARL/ATDD, Oak Ridge, TN; and D. R. Miller, A. L. Hiscox, E. Creegan, Y. Yee, and D. Zajic

In the early mourning hours of 21 April 2005 during the JORNADA field study, a wave-like disturbance was detected by microbarographs, sonic anemometers, thermocouples, a Doppler SODAR , and a tethersonde. The disturbance moved in the direction of about 200˚ with a speed of about 5 ms-1, and persisted for about an hour. The pressure oscillation had an average period of about 4 minutes, and an average wavelength of about 1200 m. The wave-like structure was preceded by an increase in surface pressure of about 0.4 mb and a decrease in temperature of about 10˚. During the passage of the disturbance between 05:00 and 05:15 MST, the wind speed at 11 m AGL increased from about 1.5 ms-1 to about 4 ms-1 while the wind speed at 1.5 m increased from about 1 ms-1 to only about 1.8 ms-1. Between about 22 and 34 m AGL, the wind direction backed from about 57˚ to about 305˚ and the wind speed decreased from about 2 ms-1 to about 1 ms-1, and the gradient Richardson number between 11 and 1.5 m AGL decreased from about 10 to about 0.1. Friction velocity and downward heat flux at 11 m AGL jumped to large values for several minutes as the disturbance passed; however, at 1.5 these quantities changed only slightly. This paper presents these and other results in detail, and it is argued that the disturbance is most-likely a density current approximately 30-m deep with sufficient wind shear at its top to generate a wave instability.

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Joint Session 4, Stable Boundary Layers 2 (Joint between 17BLT and 27 AgForest)
Wednesday, 24 May 2006, 8:00 AM-10:00 AM, Kon Tiki Ballroom

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