Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone.

The mesoscale surface structure of an explosively deepening storm that developed during Intensive Observation Period (IOP) 5 (18-20 January 1989) of the Experiment on Rapidly Deepening Cyclones over the Atlantic (ERICA) was examined to determine the influence of surface forcing on explosive cyclogen...

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Main Author: Greer, Susan N.
Other Authors: Nuss, Wendell A.
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/26626
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-266262014-11-27T16:16:25Z Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone. Greer, Susan N. Nuss, Wendell A. NA NA NA Meteorology;Physical Oceanography The mesoscale surface structure of an explosively deepening storm that developed during Intensive Observation Period (IOP) 5 (18-20 January 1989) of the Experiment on Rapidly Deepening Cyclones over the Atlantic (ERICA) was examined to determine the influence of surface forcing on explosive cyclogenesis. Aircraft, buoy and ship observations were converted to a 20 km gridded data set in order to generate objective analyses of the surface pressure and temperature fields comparable to the best hand analyses. The Brown-Liu boundary layer model was then used to calculate surface sensible heat fluxes from the gridded data sets. These analyses showed that the most significant feature that distinguished the IOP-5 storm from a typical nonexplosive storm was the region of sustained positive heat fluxes that occurred east of the low center. This feature, combined with substantial warm advection and conditions of moist symmetric neutrality in the baroclinic zone of the warm front, supports destabilization of the boundary layer and enhanced low-level baroclinicity. Thus, the positive heat fluxes fuel the convective transport of heat and moisture to the upper atmosphere and enhance the sensible and condensation heating that contribute to explosive cyclogenesis 2013-01-23T22:03:09Z 2013-01-23T22:03:09Z 1991 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/26626 o227776994 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description The mesoscale surface structure of an explosively deepening storm that developed during Intensive Observation Period (IOP) 5 (18-20 January 1989) of the Experiment on Rapidly Deepening Cyclones over the Atlantic (ERICA) was examined to determine the influence of surface forcing on explosive cyclogenesis. Aircraft, buoy and ship observations were converted to a 20 km gridded data set in order to generate objective analyses of the surface pressure and temperature fields comparable to the best hand analyses. The Brown-Liu boundary layer model was then used to calculate surface sensible heat fluxes from the gridded data sets. These analyses showed that the most significant feature that distinguished the IOP-5 storm from a typical nonexplosive storm was the region of sustained positive heat fluxes that occurred east of the low center. This feature, combined with substantial warm advection and conditions of moist symmetric neutrality in the baroclinic zone of the warm front, supports destabilization of the boundary layer and enhanced low-level baroclinicity. Thus, the positive heat fluxes fuel the convective transport of heat and moisture to the upper atmosphere and enhance the sensible and condensation heating that contribute to explosive cyclogenesis
author2 Nuss, Wendell A.
author_facet Nuss, Wendell A.
Greer, Susan N.
author Greer, Susan N.
spellingShingle Greer, Susan N.
Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone.
author_sort Greer, Susan N.
title Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone.
title_short Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone.
title_full Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone.
title_fullStr Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone.
title_full_unstemmed Mesoscale surface analysis of the ERICA IOP-5 cyclone.
title_sort mesoscale surface analysis of the erica iop-5 cyclone.
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/26626
work_keys_str_mv AT greersusann mesoscalesurfaceanalysisoftheericaiop5cyclone
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