Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experiment

The SOFIA (Surface of the Ocean: Flux and Interaction with the Atmosphere) experiment, included in the ASTEX (Atlantic Stratocumulus Transition Experiment) field program, was conducted in June 1992 in the Azores region in order to investigate air-sea exchanges, as well as the structure of the atmosp...

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Main Authors: A. Réchou, P. Durand, A. Druilhet, B. Bénech
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications
Series:Annales Geophysicae
Online Access:http://www.ann-geophys.net/13/1075/1995/angeo-13-1075-1995.html
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spelling doaj-94991601ee094c0bb4bfd2dd071a1b522020-11-25T02:11:48ZengCopernicus PublicationsAnnales Geophysicae0992-76891432-0576131010751086Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experimentA. RéchouP. DurandA. DruilhetB. BénechThe SOFIA (Surface of the Ocean: Flux and Interaction with the Atmosphere) experiment, included in the ASTEX (Atlantic Stratocumulus Transition Experiment) field program, was conducted in June 1992 in the Azores region in order to investigate air-sea exchanges, as well as the structure of the atmospheric boundary layer and its capping low-level cloud cover. We present an analysis of the vertical structure of the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL), and especially of its turbulence characteristics, deduced from the aircraft missions performed during SOFIA. The meteorological situations were characteristic of a temperate latitude under anticyclonic conditions, i.e., with weak to moderate winds, weak surface sensible heat flux, and broken capping low-altitude cloud cover topped by a strong trade inversion. We show that the mixed layer, driven by the surface fluxes, is decoupled from the above cloud layer. Although weak, the surface buoyancy flux, and the convective velocity scale deduced from it, are relevant for scaling the turbulence moments. The mixed layer then follows the behaviour of a continental convective boundary layer, with the exception of the entrainment process, which is weak in the SOFIA data. These results are confirmed by conditional sampling analysis, which shows that the major turbulence source lies in the buoyant moist updrafts at the surface. http://www.ann-geophys.net/13/1075/1995/angeo-13-1075-1995.html
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Réchou
P. Durand
A. Druilhet
B. Bénech
spellingShingle A. Réchou
P. Durand
A. Druilhet
B. Bénech
Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experiment
Annales Geophysicae
author_facet A. Réchou
P. Durand
A. Druilhet
B. Bénech
author_sort A. Réchou
title Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experiment
title_short Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experiment
title_full Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experiment
title_fullStr Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experiment
title_full_unstemmed Turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the SOFIA experiment
title_sort turbulence structure of the boundary layer below marine clouds in the sofia experiment
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Annales Geophysicae
issn 0992-7689
1432-0576
description The SOFIA (Surface of the Ocean: Flux and Interaction with the Atmosphere) experiment, included in the ASTEX (Atlantic Stratocumulus Transition Experiment) field program, was conducted in June 1992 in the Azores region in order to investigate air-sea exchanges, as well as the structure of the atmospheric boundary layer and its capping low-level cloud cover. We present an analysis of the vertical structure of the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL), and especially of its turbulence characteristics, deduced from the aircraft missions performed during SOFIA. The meteorological situations were characteristic of a temperate latitude under anticyclonic conditions, i.e., with weak to moderate winds, weak surface sensible heat flux, and broken capping low-altitude cloud cover topped by a strong trade inversion. We show that the mixed layer, driven by the surface fluxes, is decoupled from the above cloud layer. Although weak, the surface buoyancy flux, and the convective velocity scale deduced from it, are relevant for scaling the turbulence moments. The mixed layer then follows the behaviour of a continental convective boundary layer, with the exception of the entrainment process, which is weak in the SOFIA data. These results are confirmed by conditional sampling analysis, which shows that the major turbulence source lies in the buoyant moist updrafts at the surface.
url http://www.ann-geophys.net/13/1075/1995/angeo-13-1075-1995.html
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