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Downslope Windstorms

Downslope Windstorms. Yet another thing I do not understand but must try to forecast. Overview. Observations and Theory A few equations Forecasting downslope winds Online tutorial East and West forecast lab cases. Downslope Windstorms. Result from breaking mountain waves

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Downslope Windstorms

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  1. Downslope Windstorms Yet another thing I do not understand but must try to forecast

  2. Overview • Observations and Theory • A few equations • Forecasting downslope winds • Online tutorial • East and West forecast lab cases

  3. Downslope Windstorms • Result from breaking mountain waves • Are a special case of gravity waves where the phase speed of the wave is zero • Are common in many locations • lee of Rocky Mountains ?? • lee of Richardson mountains • west coasts Cape Breton and NF, as well as locations in AK • Are not the same as gap winds (like Taku winds)

  4. Important Equations Froude Number: where h = mountain height U = windspeed perpendicular to barrier For Fr > 1 vertical deflections are generated For Fr < 1 horizontal deflections dominate

  5. Wave Equation 2-D wave equation: where Scorer parameter In general, when decreases with height, wave energy can be trapped vertically and the wave can propagate horizontally

  6. Downslope Windstorm Factors • strong winds near mountaintop • stable layer near mountaintop • weak stability above stable layer • weak vertical shear or a wind reversal aloft • U = 0 at some altitude above mountaintop can produce extremely strong highly vertical waves (called a critical level)

  7. Forecasting Misconceptions • Pressure gradient fallacy • mountain waves can induce pressure gradients • using pressure gradient will cause timing errors • Table 1, Colle and Mass, MWR, 1998 • Rate of change in windspeed • if mountain waves responsible for wind, increases/decreases will be sharp and sudden

  8. Downslope Westerlies • True downslope windstorms rare in westerlies • Much more common with easterly component. Why? • Strong winds very common in westerlies thanks to gravity

  9. Critical Level • Tend to be associated with the most intense windstorms (see Colle and Mass Table) • Wave energy not spread over large area • Downslope winds (like chinook winds) tend to spread downstream • Reverse shear can result in a wave-induced critical level

  10. Other considerations • Often sharp boundary between weak upslope flow and strongest downslope flow (hydraulic jump) • Hydraulic jump can propagate downstream • Cold air dome can prevent penetration of high winds to the surface or can keep highest winds further up the slope • Some experts claim that eta coordinates are not very effective in high resolution models for downslope windstorms

  11. Summary • Must think conceptually in three dimensions • Waiting for pressure gradient to appear on progs will result in poor forecasts • For chronic gap winds, breaking waves might contribute to most severe events • Effective understanding can differentiate between strong and severe winds

  12. Bottom Line • Even in NE Colorado, with the highest density of observations and atmospheric scientists on the planet, downslope windstorms and their contributing factors are still not fully understood

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