Investigations of a Winter Mountain Storm in Utah. Part III: Single-Doppler Radar Measurements of Turbulence

This Part III of a multipart paper deals with the analysis of turbulent motion in a winter storm, which occurred over the mountains of southwest Utah. The storm was documented with a long duration single-Doppler radar dataset ( similar to 21 h) comprised of volume scan observations acquired at 10-mi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the atmospheric sciences 1991, Vol.48 (10), p.1306-1318
Hauptverfasser: Campistron, Bernard, Huggins, Arlen W., Long, Alexis B.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This Part III of a multipart paper deals with the analysis of turbulent motion in a winter storm, which occurred over the mountains of southwest Utah. The storm was documented with a long duration single-Doppler radar dataset ( similar to 21 h) comprised of volume scan observations acquired at 10-min intervals. Turbulence parameters were determined using a new technique of volume processing of single-Doppler radar data. Physical analysis of turbulence is restricted to three particular storm regions: a prefrontal region far removed from a cold frontal discontinuity, a frontal zone aloft, and a low layer in the post-frontal region where a long lasting ( similar to 6 h) wind-maximum existed. The prefrontal period showed enhancement of turbulent parameters near 2.6 km height, apparently due to disturbed flow caused by an upwind mountain range. Turbulence parameters in this prefrontal region showed good agreement with K-mixing length theory. Within the frontal zone most turbulence parameters reached peak values, but were generally less than orographically induced turbulence values in the prefrontal period. Turbulence in the low-level postfrontal period experienced periodic oscillations consistent with precipitation and kinematic variables described in Parts I and II, and associated with mesoscale precipitation bands. Acceleration of the valley-parallel wind component was apparent in prefrontal and postfrontal periods and was related to the specific valley configuration through a Venturi effect.
ISSN:0022-4928
1520-0469
DOI:10.1175/1520-0469(1991)048<1306:IOAWMS>2.0.CO;2