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contributor authorDouglas, Michael W.
contributor authorLi, Shuhua
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:10:51Z
date available2017-06-09T16:10:51Z
date copyright1996/06/01
date issued1996
identifier issn0027-0644
identifier otherams-62731.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4203655
description abstractThis paper describes the tropospheric circulation over the lower deserts of Arizona, California, and northwestern Mexico using observations from a special rawinsonde network operated during July and August as part of the 1993 Southwest Area Monsoon Project. The observations show that the flow over the low desert is diffluent, divergent, and upslope during the afternoon and confluent, weakly convergent, and downslope or slope parallel in the early morning hours. This diurnal cycle may help to explain the observed tendency for summer thunderstorms to occur most frequently over the low desert during the nighttime. Despite the relatively short observation interval (18 days), the authors show that this period is similar to multiyear mean conditions during July and August. A heat budget indicates that radiative heating in the lower troposphere over the desert is approximately balanced by the influx of cooler air from over the Gulf of California but uncertainties in the estimates of vertical motion and horizontal temperature advection make the budget uncertain in the middle troposphere.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleDiurnal Variation of the Lower-Tropospheric Flow over the Arizona Low Desert from SWAMP-1993 Observations
typeJournal Paper
journal volume124
journal issue6
journal titleMonthly Weather Review
identifier doi10.1175/1520-0493(1996)124<1211:DVOTLT>2.0.CO;2
journal fristpage1211
journal lastpage1224
treeMonthly Weather Review:;1996:;volume( 124 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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