Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag

Orographic Gravity Wave Drag (GWD) is known to be affected by vertical wind shear. Linear variation in the magnitude of the wind with height causes GWD to be decreased, whilst negative wind profile curvature (which usually occurs in directional shear, i.e. wind turning with height) causes an increas...

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Main Author: Turner, Holly Victoria
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of Reading 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48683/1926.00085674
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/id/eprint/85674
id ftdatacite:10.48683/1926.00085674
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spelling ftdatacite:10.48683/1926.00085674 2023-05-15T13:36:15+02:00 Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag Turner, Holly Victoria 2019 https://dx.doi.org/10.48683/1926.00085674 https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/id/eprint/85674 unknown University of Reading article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle Thesis 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00085674 2022-02-08T12:07:57Z Orographic Gravity Wave Drag (GWD) is known to be affected by vertical wind shear. Linear variation in the magnitude of the wind with height causes GWD to be decreased, whilst negative wind profile curvature (which usually occurs in directional shear, i.e. wind turning with height) causes an increase. Analytical formulae have previously been derived which evaluate this correction to the drag due to shear relative to its value for vertically uniform wind and static stability. The corresponding drag enhancement formulae are tested here for their sensitivity both to the height in the atmosphere at which the associated vertical derivatives of the wind velocity are evaluated and to the anisotropy of the subgrid-scale orography. It is found that whilst the correction is qualitatively robust to changes in calculation height, results show significant quantitative variation between the two heights chosen. Use of an axisymmetric orography profile causes an overestimation of the drag relative to a realistic orography anisotropy. Directional shear effects, which increase the drag, are found to be dominant for a high fraction of the time over a large proportion of the Antarctic region. Inclusion of a simulated boundary layer is found to reduce the magnitude of wave activity seen in idealized simulations. The magnitude of the GWD is thus reduced, in some cases by a factor as large as 3. This highlights the need to apply a corrective factor to the theory to account for the effects of the boundary layer on the surface GWD. This corrective factor is deduced using simulations with and without a boundary layer. Further idealized simulations are carried out to try to identify the optimum height at which to evaluate the shear-induced drag correction. Drag enhancement values are calculated using both linear theory and WRF model output, which are then compared in order to deduce at what height the two methods are closest. It is not possible to identify a single optimum height, however the error between the model derived and analytical drag enhancements is frequently found to be minimised at a level within the boundary layer. Text Antarc* Antarctic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
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description Orographic Gravity Wave Drag (GWD) is known to be affected by vertical wind shear. Linear variation in the magnitude of the wind with height causes GWD to be decreased, whilst negative wind profile curvature (which usually occurs in directional shear, i.e. wind turning with height) causes an increase. Analytical formulae have previously been derived which evaluate this correction to the drag due to shear relative to its value for vertically uniform wind and static stability. The corresponding drag enhancement formulae are tested here for their sensitivity both to the height in the atmosphere at which the associated vertical derivatives of the wind velocity are evaluated and to the anisotropy of the subgrid-scale orography. It is found that whilst the correction is qualitatively robust to changes in calculation height, results show significant quantitative variation between the two heights chosen. Use of an axisymmetric orography profile causes an overestimation of the drag relative to a realistic orography anisotropy. Directional shear effects, which increase the drag, are found to be dominant for a high fraction of the time over a large proportion of the Antarctic region. Inclusion of a simulated boundary layer is found to reduce the magnitude of wave activity seen in idealized simulations. The magnitude of the GWD is thus reduced, in some cases by a factor as large as 3. This highlights the need to apply a corrective factor to the theory to account for the effects of the boundary layer on the surface GWD. This corrective factor is deduced using simulations with and without a boundary layer. Further idealized simulations are carried out to try to identify the optimum height at which to evaluate the shear-induced drag correction. Drag enhancement values are calculated using both linear theory and WRF model output, which are then compared in order to deduce at what height the two methods are closest. It is not possible to identify a single optimum height, however the error between the model derived and analytical drag enhancements is frequently found to be minimised at a level within the boundary layer.
format Text
author Turner, Holly Victoria
spellingShingle Turner, Holly Victoria
Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag
author_facet Turner, Holly Victoria
author_sort Turner, Holly Victoria
title Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag
title_short Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag
title_full Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag
title_fullStr Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag
title_full_unstemmed Wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag
title_sort wind profile and boundary layer effects on orographic gravity wave drag
publisher University of Reading
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.48683/1926.00085674
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/id/eprint/85674
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00085674
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