Horizontal Diffusion in Ocean Dumping Experiments

1981 ◽  
pp. 131-159
Author(s):  
Takashi Ichiye ◽  
Masamichi Inoue ◽  
Michael Carnes
2012 ◽  
Vol 69 (7) ◽  
pp. 2284-2299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Rotunno ◽  
George H. Bryan

Abstract In this study the authors analyze and interpret the effects of parameterized diffusion on the nearly steady axisymmetric numerical simulations of hurricanes presented in a recent study. In that study it was concluded that horizontal diffusion was the most important control factor for the maximum simulated hurricane intensity. Through budget analysis it is shown here that horizontal diffusion is a major contributor to the angular momentum budget in the boundary layer of the numerically simulated storms. Moreover, a new scale analysis recognizing the anisotropic nature of the parameterized model diffusion shows why the horizontal diffusion plays such a dominant role. A simple analytical model is developed that captures the essence of the effect. The role of vertical diffusion in the boundary layer in the aforementioned numerical simulations is more closely examined here. It is shown that the boundary layer in these simulations is consistent with known analytical solutions in that boundary layer depth increases and the amount of “overshoot” (maximum wind in excess of the gradient wind) decreases with increasing vertical diffusion. However, the maximum wind itself depends mainly on horizontal diffusion and is relatively insensitive to vertical diffusion; the overshoot variation with vertical viscosity mainly comes from changes in the gradient wind with vertical viscosity. The present considerations of parameterized diffusion allow a new contribution to the dialog in the literature on the meaning and interpretation of the Emanuel potential intensity theory.


Author(s):  
D. W. Lear ◽  
M. L. O’Malley ◽  
S. K. Smith
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Claude R. Schwab ◽  
Theodor C. Sauer ◽  
Guinn F. Hubbard ◽  
Hussein Abdel-Reheim ◽  
James M. Brooks

2005 ◽  
Vol 133 (5) ◽  
pp. 1384-1402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hann-Ming Henry Juang ◽  
Ching-Teng Lee ◽  
Yongxin Zhang ◽  
Yucheng Song ◽  
Ming-Chin Wu ◽  
...  

Abstract The National Centers for Environmental Prediction regional spectral model and mesoscale spectral model (NCEP RSM/MSM) use a spectral computation on perturbation. The perturbation is defined as a deviation between RSM/MSM forecast value and their outer model or analysis value on model sigma-coordinate surfaces. The horizontal diffusion used in the models applies perturbation diffusion in spectral space on model sigma-coordinate surfaces. However, because of the large difference between RSM/MSM and their outer model or analysis terrains, the perturbation on sigma surfaces could be large over steep mountain areas as horizontal resolution increases. This large perturbation could introduce systematical error due to artificial vertical mixing from horizontal diffusion on sigma surface for variables with strong vertical stratification, such as temperature and humidity. This nonnegligible error would eventually ruin the forecast and simulation results over mountain areas in high-resolution modeling. To avoid the erroneous vertical mixing on the systematic perturbation, a coordinate transformation is applied in deriving a horizontal diffusion on pressure surface from the variables provided on terrain-following sigma coordinates. Three cases are selected to illustrate the impact of the horizontal diffusion on pressure surfaces, which reduces or eliminates numerical errors of mesoscale modeling over mountain areas. These cases address concerns from all aspects, including unstable and stable synoptic conditions, moist and dry atmospheric settings, weather and climate integrations, hydrostatic and nonhydrostatic modeling, and island and continental orography. After implementing the horizontal diffusion on pressure surfaces for temperature and humidity, the results show better rainfall and flow pattern simulations when compared to observations. Horizontal diffusion corrects the warming, moistening, excessive rainfall, and convergent flow patterns around high mountains under unstable and moist synoptic conditions and corrects the cooling, drying, and divergent flow patterns under stable and dry synoptic settings.


2007 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce K. Zoitos ◽  
Michael J. Andrejcak ◽  
Paul M. Boymel ◽  
L. Daniel Maxim ◽  
Ron Niebo

1995 ◽  
Vol 34 (7) ◽  
pp. 1653-1665 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hirohiko Ishikawa

Abstract The effect of horizontal diffusion on the long-range transport simulation is examined with a Lagrangian particle transport model. The transport of radioactivity released from Chernobyl is simulated by the model with different values of horizontal diffusivity. The computed concentrations are statistically compared with measured concentration. The best simulation is found when the magnitude of the horizontal diffusivity is between 3.3 × 104 and 1.0 × 105 m2 s−1. The performance of empirical formulas of horizontal diffusion, in which mean-square displacement σy is specified as a function of time, is also examined. A part of measured concentrations, which are relatively low concentrations, cannot be explained by transport and diffusion only. It is shown that these measured concentrations can be explained by resuspension of deposited radioactivity.


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