Temperature And Wind Velocity Oscillations Along a Gentle Slope During Sea-Breeze Events

Authors: Sophie Bastin1; Philippe Drobinski2

Source: Boundary-Layer Meteorology, Volume 114, Number 3, March 2005 , pp. 573-594(22)

Publisher: Springer

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Abstract:

The flow structure on a gentle slope at Vallon d’Ol in the northern suburbs of Marseille in southern France has been documented by means of surface wind and temperature measurements collected from 7 June to 14 July 2001 during the ESCOMPTE experiment. The analysis of the time series reveals temperature and wind speed oscillations during several nights (about 60--90 min oscillation period) and several days (about 120–180 min oscillation period) during the whole observing period. Oscillating katabatic winds have been reported in the literature from theoretical, experimental and numerical studies. In the present study, the dynamics of the observed oscillating katabatic winds are in good agreement with the theory.In contrast to katabatic winds, no daytime observations of oscillating anabatic upslope flows have ever been published to our knowledge, probably because of temperature inversion break-up that inhibits upslope winds. The present paper shows that cold air advection by a sea breeze generates a mesoscale horizontal temperature gradient, and hence baroclinicity in the atmosphere, which then allows low-frequency oscillations, similar to a katabatic flow. An expression for the oscillation period is derived that accounts for the contribution of the sea-breeze induced mesoscale horizontal temperature gradient. The theoretical prediction of the oscillation period is compared to the measurements, and good agreement is found. The statistical analysis of the wind flow at Vallon d’Ol shows a dominant north-easterly to easterly flow pattern for nighttime oscillations and a dominant south-westerly flow pattern for daytime oscillations. These results are consistent with published numerical simulation results that show that the air drains off the mountain along the maximum slope direction, which in the studied case is oriented south-west to north-east.

Keywords: Oscillations; Sea breeze; Slope wind

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1007/s10546-004-1237-6

Affiliations: 1: Institut Pierre Simon Laplace/Service d’Aéronomie, Paris, France, Email: Sophie.bastin@aero.jussieu.fr 2: Institut Pierre Simon Laplace/Service d’Aéronomie, Paris, France,

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