TY - JOUR
T1 - On the anomalous counterclockwise turning of the surface wind with time in the plains of the United States
AU - Bluestein, Howard B.
AU - Romine, Glen S.
AU - Rotunno, Richard
AU - Reif, Dylan W.
AU - Weiss, Christopher C.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments. This study was supported by NSF Grant AGS-1560945 and by NOAA Grant NA15OAR4590191 to Glen Romine at UCAR/NCAR. Much of the work was done at the Mesoscale Microscale Meteorology (MMM) Division at NCAR. The first author thanks NCAR for its support with a Faculty Fellowship during his sabbatical leave and for hosting a summer visit. We also are grateful for useful discussions with Peggy LeMone (NCAR), Morris Weisman (NCAR), Alan Shapiro (University of Oklahoma), and Cliff Mass (University of Washington). The Oklahoma Climatological Survey at the University of Oklahoma provided Oklahoma Mesonet data, the National Wind Institute at Texas Tech University provided West Texas Mesonet data, and NOAA provided WPDN data; Paul Neiman (NOAA/ESRL) provided information about the surface instrumentation at profiler sites. We also acknowledge high-performance computing support from Yellowstone (ark:/85065/d7wd3xhc), provided by NCAR’s Computational and Information Systems Laboratory, sponsored by the National Science Foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2018/2/1
Y1 - 2018/2/1
N2 - Vertical shear in the boundary layer affects the mode of convective storms that can exist if they are triggered. In western portions of the southern Great Plains of the United States, vertical shear, in the absence of any transient features, changes diurnally in a systematic way, thus leading to a preferred time of day for the more intense modes of convection when the shear, particularly at low levels, is greatest. In this study, yearly and seasonally averaged wind observations for each time of day are used to document the diurnal variations in wind at the surface and in the boundary layer, with synoptic and mesoscale features effectively filtered out. Data from surface mesonets in Oklahoma and Texas, Doppler wind profilers, instrumented tower data, and seasonally averaged wind data for each time of day from convection-allowing numerical model forecasts are used. It is shown through analysis of observations and model data that the perturbation wind above anemometer level turns in a clockwise manner with time, in a manner consistent with prior studies, yet the perturbation wind at anemometer level turns in an anomalous, counterclockwise manner with time. Evidence is presented based on diagnosis of the model forecasts that the dynamics during the early evening boundary layer transition are, in large part, responsible for the behavior of the hodographs at that time: as vertical mixing in the boundary layer diminishes, the drag on the wind at anemometer level persists, leading to rapid deceleration of the meridional component of the wind. This deceleration acts to turn the wind to the left rather than to the right, as would be expected from the Coriolis force alone.
AB - Vertical shear in the boundary layer affects the mode of convective storms that can exist if they are triggered. In western portions of the southern Great Plains of the United States, vertical shear, in the absence of any transient features, changes diurnally in a systematic way, thus leading to a preferred time of day for the more intense modes of convection when the shear, particularly at low levels, is greatest. In this study, yearly and seasonally averaged wind observations for each time of day are used to document the diurnal variations in wind at the surface and in the boundary layer, with synoptic and mesoscale features effectively filtered out. Data from surface mesonets in Oklahoma and Texas, Doppler wind profilers, instrumented tower data, and seasonally averaged wind data for each time of day from convection-allowing numerical model forecasts are used. It is shown through analysis of observations and model data that the perturbation wind above anemometer level turns in a clockwise manner with time, in a manner consistent with prior studies, yet the perturbation wind at anemometer level turns in an anomalous, counterclockwise manner with time. Evidence is presented based on diagnosis of the model forecasts that the dynamics during the early evening boundary layer transition are, in large part, responsible for the behavior of the hodographs at that time: as vertical mixing in the boundary layer diminishes, the drag on the wind at anemometer level persists, leading to rapid deceleration of the meridional component of the wind. This deceleration acts to turn the wind to the left rather than to the right, as would be expected from the Coriolis force alone.
KW - Boundary layer
KW - Diurnal effects
KW - Mixing
KW - Spring season
KW - Supercells
KW - Surface layer
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85042429915&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1175/MWR-D-17-0297.1
DO - 10.1175/MWR-D-17-0297.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85042429915
SN - 0027-0644
VL - 146
SP - 467
EP - 484
JO - Monthly Weather Review
JF - Monthly Weather Review
IS - 2
ER -