Publication | Open Access
Effective Buoyancy, Inertial Pressure, and the Mechanical Generation of Boundary Layer Mass Flux by Cold Pools
77
Citations
33
References
2015
Year
EngineeringFluid MechanicsClimate ModelingGeophysical FlowBoundary LayerEarth ScienceCold PoolsAtmospheric ScienceInertial PressureNatural ConvectionEffective BuoyancyHydrometeorologyMeteorologyMesoscale MeteorologyCloud DynamicRadiation MeasurementInertial ForcesClimate DynamicsBuoyancy ForcingMeteorological ForcingAerodynamics
Abstract The Davies-Jones formulation of effective buoyancy is used to define inertial and buoyant components of vertical force and to develop an intuition for these components by considering simple cases. This decomposition is applied to the triggering of new boundary layer mass flux by cold pools in a cloud-resolving simulation of radiative–convective equilibrium (RCE). The triggering is found to be dominated by inertial forces, and this is explained by estimating the ratio of the inertial forcing to the buoyancy forcing, which scales as H/h, where H is the characteristic height of the initial downdraft and h is the characteristic height of the mature cold pool’s gust front. In a simulation of the transition from shallow to deep convection, the buoyancy forcing plays a dominant role in triggering mass flux in the shallow regime, but the force balance tips in favor of inertial forcing just as precipitation sets in, consistent with the RCE results.
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