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Mountain Meteorology

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Mountains complement desert as desert complements city, as wilderness ... L. Darby & R. Banta, ATDD/ETL. Other subjects. Orography and the General Circulation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mountain Meteorology


1
Mountain Meteorology
Mountains complement desert as desert complements
city, as wilderness complements and completes
civilization. Edward Abbey
  • Meteorology 5550
  • 490 INSCC
  • TH 1045 1205
  • John Horel
  • Jim Steenburgh

Photo J. Horel
2
Course Objectives and Content
  • Understand the influence of the earths orography
    upon weather and climate
  • First Half- John Horel
  • Geographical controls of mountain weather and
    climate
  • Terrain-forced flows
  • Flow interaction with complex terrain

Photo J. Horel
3
Course Content (cont.)
  • Second half- Jim Steenburgh
  • Orographically modified cyclones
  • Orographically trapped disturbances
  • Orographic precipitation
  • Invited presentations
  • Fire weather
  • Air quality
  • Avalanches
  • Surface transportation

Houze 1993
4
Grading
  • 40 Homework, class participation, literature
    reviews
  • 20 Participation and writeup of results from
    field experiment
  • 20 1st half quiz
  • 20 2nd half quiz

5
Source Material
  • Mountain Meteorology. D. Whiteman. 2000.
  • Mountain Weather and Climate. R Barry. 1992.
  • Atmospheric Processes over Complex Terrain. W.
    Blumen 1990.
  • Influence of Mountains on the Atmosphere. R.
    Smith. 1979. Advances in Geophysics. 21.
  • Additional Reading

6
Reading Assignments
  • Many available on-line. To save trees, you are to
    access them on-line from campus and print them as
    needed
  • http//ams.allenpress.com/amsonline/?requestindex
    -html

7
First Reading Assignment
  • First reading assignment Barry, R. G. (1978)
    H. B. de Saussure the first mountain
    meteorologist. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 59,
    702-5.
  • Summarize in a few paragraphs (1) who Saussure
    was (2) how did he make the measurements and
    what were his results regarding the decrease of
    temperature with height (3) what other
    contributions to mountain meteorology did he
    make?
  • Due via email at beginning of class on Aug. 30.
    Send to jhorel_at_met.utah.edu, Be prepared to
    discuss the reading during that class.

8
Field Project
  • Analysis of wind circulations on ski-jump slope
  • Weather permitting
  • Set up on Friday September 28
  • Observations Saturday morning September 29
  • Takedown in afternoon
  • Requires planning in advance by class to design
    useful field project
  • Requires analysis of data after data collection
    completed

Photo J. Horel
9
VTMX Workshop
  • September 10-12
  • Useful presentations on local wind circulations
    in Salt Lake Valley
  • Plan on attending a few hours at some point
    instead of class on the 11th (and 13th?)

10
What is a mountain?
  • Common usage
  • 600 m or more of local relief defines a mountain
  • Less than 600m is a hill
  • High mountain/alpine areas (Troll 1973 Arct.
    Alp. Res., 5, 19-27)
  • Relative to terrain features
  • Upper timberline
  • Snow line

Himalayas Photo credit NASA/Science Photo
Library
11
What are the effects of mountains?
  • Substantial modification of synoptic or meso
    scale weather systems by dynamical and
    thermodynamical processes through a considerable
    depth of the atmosphere
  • Recurrent generation of distinctive wx
    conditions, involving dynamically and thermally
    induced wind systems, cloudiness, and
    precipitation regimes
  • Slope and aspect variations on scales of 10-100 m
    form mosaic of local climates
  • (Barry 1992)

12
Effects of Mountains
Carruthers and Hunt 1990
13
Whiteman (2000)
http//infoplease.lycos.com/ipa/A0001792.html
14
Precipitation
15
Barry 1992
16
Barry (1992)
17
Mountains
  • mountains as fraction of total land surface
    (land 30)
  • 0-1000 m 10
  • 1000-2000 m 3
  • 2000-3000 m 3
  • gt 3000 m 4
  • Total 20
  • Barry 1992
  • mountain as fraction of earth 6

18
Mt. Everest
  • http//www.mteverest.com/
  • http//www.mnteverest.net/
  • http//www.m.chiba-u.ac.jp/class/respir/eve_e.htm
  • http//www.newton.mec.edu/Angier/DimSum/Him.Range
    Pix.html
  • Height of Mt. Everest 8848m
  • (http//www.m.chiba-u.ac.jp/class/respir/hyoko_e.h
    tm)

19
High Elevation Observatories
  • Mt Washington
  • http//www.mountwashington.org/
  • Storm Peak Laboratory
  • http//www.dri.edu/Projects/SPL/

20
Geographical controls of mountain climate (Barry
1992)
  • Latitude
  • Continentality
  • Altitude
  • Topography

Jeff Klein. SLC BLM)
Jeff Klein. SLC BLM)
21
Thermally forced terrain circulations
  • Mountain-valley winds
  • Slope flows
  • Peter Sinks Experiment
  • VTMX
  • lake breeze

22
Flow Interaction With Complex Terrain
  • Buoyancy oscillations
  • Flow over vs. around obstacles
  • Kinetic and potential energy of flows
  • Mountain waves
  • Gravity wave drag
  • Trapped lee waves

Photo J. Horel
23
Downslope Windstorms
  • Conceptual models
  • Observations
  • Numerical studies
  • Gap winds

L. Darby R. Banta, ATDD/ETL
24
Other subjects
  • Orography and the General Circulation
  • Mountain torque
  • Physiology of high altitude
  • Climate change at high altitude

25
1st Homework Assignment
  • Bring in a couple (to as many as you want) of
    mountain and mountain weather related photos
  • Be prepared to say a few words about 1-2 photos
  • If youre willing to allow use of the photos for
    this class and future classes, scan the images on
    the PC in Rm 480 (details to be provided, but
    dont leave them with me)
  • Due whenever

26
Homework Assignment 2
  • (1) Find 5 interesting and useful internet web
    pages related to mountain weather, mountain
    climates, or alpine environments
  • (2) Send me in 1 email the web addresses with a
    1-2 sentence description of the content of each
    page
  • (3) Provide at least 2 scientific, literary, or
    artistic (music/art) definitions or descriptions
    of mountains. Not from dictionaries
  • (4) Provide a reference/source for that
    definition and send it in the same email as that
    used above
  • Due August 30

27
Parameters used to define flow (Smith 1979)
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