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    Terrain-Induced Turbulence over Lantau Island: 7 June 1994 Tropical Storm Russ Case Study

    Source: Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;1997:;Volume( 054 ):;issue: 013::page 1795
    Author:
    Clark, Terry L.
    ,
    Keller, Teddie
    ,
    Coen, Janice
    ,
    Neilley, Peter
    ,
    Hsu, Hsiao-ming
    ,
    Hall, William D.
    DOI: 10.1175/1520-0469(1997)054<1795:TITOLI>2.0.CO;2
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: Numerical simulations of terrain-induced turbulence associated with airflow over Lantau Island of Hong Kong are presented. Lantau is a relatively small island with three narrow peaks rising to between 700 and 950 m above mean sea level. This research was undertaken as part of a project to better understand and predict the nature of turbulence and shear at the new airport site on the island of Chek Lap Kok, which is located to the lee of Lantau. Intensive ground and aerial observations were taken from May through June 1994, during the Lantau Experiment (LANTEX). This paper focuses on flow associated with the passage of Tropical Storm Russ on 7 June 1994, during which severe turbulence was observed. The nature of the environmental and topographic forcing on 7 June 1994 resulted in the turbulence and shear being dominated by the combination of topographic effects and surface friction. High-resolution numerical simulations, initialized using local sounding data, were performed using the Clark model. The simulation results indicate that gravity-wave dynamics played a very minor role in the flow distortion and generation of turbulence. As a result of this flow regime, relatively high vertical and horizontal resolution was required to simulate the mechanically generated turbulence associated with Tropical Storm Russ. Results are presented using a vertical resolution of 10 m near the surface and with horizontal resolutions of both 125 and 62.5 m over local, nested domains of about 13?24 km on a side. The 125-m model resolution simulated highly distorted flow in the lee of Lantau, with streaks emanating downstream from regions of sharp orographic gradients. At this resolution the streaks were nearly steady in time. At the higher horizontal resolution of 62.5 m the streaks became unstable, resulting in eddies advecting downstream within a distorted streaky mean flow similar to the 125-m resolution simulation. The temporally averaged fields changed little with the increase in resolution; however, there was a three- to fourfold increase in the temporal variability of the flow, as indicated by the standard deviation of the wind from a 10-min temporal average. Overall, the higher resolution simulations compared quite well with the observations, whereas the lower resolution cases did not. The high-resolution experiments also showed a much broader horizontal and vertical extent for the transient eddies. The depth of orographic influence increased from about 200 m to over 600 m with the increase in resolution. A physical explanation, using simple linear arguments based on the blocking effects of the eddies, is presented. The nature of the flow separation is analyzed using Bernoulli?s energy form to display the geometry of the separation bubbles. The height of the 80 m2 s?2 energy surface shows eddies forming in regions of large orographic gradients and advecting downstream. Tests using both buoyancy excitation and stochastic backscatter to parameterize the underresolved dynamics at the 125-m resolution are presented, as well as one experiment testing the influence of static stability suppressing turbulence development. All these tests showed no significant effect. Implications of these results to the parameterization of mechanically induced turbulence in complex terrain are discussed.
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      Terrain-Induced Turbulence over Lantau Island: 7 June 1994 Tropical Storm Russ Case Study

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4158423
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    • Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences

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    contributor authorClark, Terry L.
    contributor authorKeller, Teddie
    contributor authorCoen, Janice
    contributor authorNeilley, Peter
    contributor authorHsu, Hsiao-ming
    contributor authorHall, William D.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T14:34:35Z
    date available2017-06-09T14:34:35Z
    date copyright1997/07/01
    date issued1997
    identifier issn0022-4928
    identifier otherams-22019.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4158423
    description abstractNumerical simulations of terrain-induced turbulence associated with airflow over Lantau Island of Hong Kong are presented. Lantau is a relatively small island with three narrow peaks rising to between 700 and 950 m above mean sea level. This research was undertaken as part of a project to better understand and predict the nature of turbulence and shear at the new airport site on the island of Chek Lap Kok, which is located to the lee of Lantau. Intensive ground and aerial observations were taken from May through June 1994, during the Lantau Experiment (LANTEX). This paper focuses on flow associated with the passage of Tropical Storm Russ on 7 June 1994, during which severe turbulence was observed. The nature of the environmental and topographic forcing on 7 June 1994 resulted in the turbulence and shear being dominated by the combination of topographic effects and surface friction. High-resolution numerical simulations, initialized using local sounding data, were performed using the Clark model. The simulation results indicate that gravity-wave dynamics played a very minor role in the flow distortion and generation of turbulence. As a result of this flow regime, relatively high vertical and horizontal resolution was required to simulate the mechanically generated turbulence associated with Tropical Storm Russ. Results are presented using a vertical resolution of 10 m near the surface and with horizontal resolutions of both 125 and 62.5 m over local, nested domains of about 13?24 km on a side. The 125-m model resolution simulated highly distorted flow in the lee of Lantau, with streaks emanating downstream from regions of sharp orographic gradients. At this resolution the streaks were nearly steady in time. At the higher horizontal resolution of 62.5 m the streaks became unstable, resulting in eddies advecting downstream within a distorted streaky mean flow similar to the 125-m resolution simulation. The temporally averaged fields changed little with the increase in resolution; however, there was a three- to fourfold increase in the temporal variability of the flow, as indicated by the standard deviation of the wind from a 10-min temporal average. Overall, the higher resolution simulations compared quite well with the observations, whereas the lower resolution cases did not. The high-resolution experiments also showed a much broader horizontal and vertical extent for the transient eddies. The depth of orographic influence increased from about 200 m to over 600 m with the increase in resolution. A physical explanation, using simple linear arguments based on the blocking effects of the eddies, is presented. The nature of the flow separation is analyzed using Bernoulli?s energy form to display the geometry of the separation bubbles. The height of the 80 m2 s?2 energy surface shows eddies forming in regions of large orographic gradients and advecting downstream. Tests using both buoyancy excitation and stochastic backscatter to parameterize the underresolved dynamics at the 125-m resolution are presented, as well as one experiment testing the influence of static stability suppressing turbulence development. All these tests showed no significant effect. Implications of these results to the parameterization of mechanically induced turbulence in complex terrain are discussed.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleTerrain-Induced Turbulence over Lantau Island: 7 June 1994 Tropical Storm Russ Case Study
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume54
    journal issue13
    journal titleJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
    identifier doi10.1175/1520-0469(1997)054<1795:TITOLI>2.0.CO;2
    journal fristpage1795
    journal lastpage1814
    treeJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;1997:;Volume( 054 ):;issue: 013
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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