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Large wind shears and their implications for diffusion

时  间:2017年7月24日上午9:00
地  点:行政科研楼1412会议室
报告人:刘汉立博士
单  位:美国国家大气研究中心

摘  要:The NCAR Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM), with a quasi-uniform horizontal resolution of ~25km and a vertical resolution of 0.1 scale height, produces large vertical shear of horizontal wind with peaks around the mesopause and the tropical and midlatitude tropopause, In these regions the static stability also reaches peak values and therefore allows large vertical shears before the onset of dynamical instability. The wind shear peaks near the mesopause and the tropopause from the simulation compare well with those identified in observations, including the magnitude, latitudinal dependence, and large shear statistics. By analyzing the probability density functions of the wind shears and their dependence on the zonal scales, it is found that smaller scale processes, likely gravity waves, contribute significantly to the large shears, and may play a dominant role in producing the largest shears. Climatological tidal waves have secondary contribution to the large winds and shears, but spectral analysis suggests that they can modulate wind shear perturbations by gravity waves in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere. Implications for tracer transport and mixing in these regions are explored by estimating diffusion coefficients based on the root mean square winds, shears and corresponding spatial scales from model results.


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