Two years observations on the diurnal evolution of coastal atmospheric boundary layer features over Thiruvananthapuram (8.5∘ N, 76.9∘ E), India
The atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) over a given coastal station is influenced by the presence of mesoscale sea breeze circulation, together with the local and synoptic weather, which directly or indirectly modulate the vertical thickness of ABL ( z ABL ). Despite its importance in the characteriza...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Theoretical and applied climatology 2018, Vol.131 (1-2), p.77-90 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) over a given coastal station is influenced by the presence of mesoscale sea breeze circulation, together with the local and synoptic weather, which directly or indirectly modulate the vertical thickness of ABL (
z
ABL
). Despite its importance in the characterization of lower tropospheric processes and atmospheric modeling studies, a reliable climatology on the temporal evolution of
z
ABL
is not available over the tropics. Here, we investigate the challenges involved in determination of the ABL heights, and discuss an objective method to define the vertical structure of coastal ABL. The study presents a two year morphology on the diurnal evolution of the vertical thickness of sea breeze flow (
z
SBF
) and
z
ABL
in association with the altitudes of lifting condensation level (
z
LCL
) over Thiruvananthapuram (8.5
∘
N, 76.9
∘
E), a representative coastal station on the western coastline of the Indian sub-continent. We make use of about 516 balloon-borne GPS sonde measurements in the present study, which were carried out as part of the tropical tropopause dynamics field experiment under the climate and weather of the sun-earth system (CAWSES)–India program. Results obtained from the present study reveal major differences in the temporal evolution of the ABL features in relation to the strength of sea breeze circulation and monsoonal wind flow during the winter and summer monsoon respectively. The diurnal evolution in
z
ABL
is very prominent in the winter monsoon as against the summer monsoon, which is attributed to the impact of large-scale monsoonal flow over the surface layer meteorology. For a majority of the database, the
z
LCL
altitudes are found to be higher than that of the
z
ABL
, indicating a possible decoupling of the ABL with the low-level clouds. |
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ISSN: | 0177-798X 1434-4483 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00704-016-1955-y |