downslope flow
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Abstract The diurnal features of rainfall over the Himalayas have been widely investigated, but their triggers remain unclear. In this work, we divided the Himalayas and surroundings into four regions, including the plains, foothills, slopes, and plateau, and investigated the above issues. The results show that the rainfall total is controlled by large-scale monsoon flows while its meridional distribution is regulated by terrain circulations. The afternoon rainfall peak in the plains and foothills is linked with the intersection of two monsoon flows. The southward-shifting rainfall peak, which occurs from midnight to early morning in the slopes and foothills, is affected by the nighttime downslope flow and the strong Bay of Bengal monsoon flow in the morning. The evening rainfall peak in the plateau and high-altitude slopes is thought to be a result of the atmospheric layer being at its moistest at that time.


Author(s):  
Daniel Mendelsohn ◽  
Eric Comerma ◽  
Matt Bernardo ◽  
Jeremy Fontenault ◽  
Sitara Baboolal

ABSTRACT Highly viscous oil does not behave the same as other regular liquid hydrocarbon mixtures. To evaluate the effects of a potential land-based blowout on the surrounding environment, RPS implemented a multi-step approach to simulate the trajectory and fate of high viscosity oil downslope flow. If spilled on land, initially warm oil cools and tends to gel, implying a non-Newtonian flow. To predict the behavior of high viscosity oil as it flows downslope, spreads and cools, RPS developed a new unique land-based spill model. The behavior of highly viscous crude oil has many similarities to volcanic lava flows, particularly the stark changes in oil viscosity and shear stress as the fluid cools. This study describes a “lava” flow numerical model developed to simulate the response of high viscosity oils. The viscous flow model is based on the lava model of Griffiths (2000) which simulates the unconfined motion of a Bingham fluid down a plane of constant slope. The model allows all physical and chemical parameters to vary continuously downslope. The lateral flow is assumed to cease when the cross-slope pressure gradient is balanced by the basal-yield stress also giving the height of the flow (H) on the center line of the flow as a function of shear stress. For oil flow motion the downslope pressure gradient must be greater than the oil shear stress and hence there is a critical height, based on the local oil shear stress and slope, below which there will be no downslope motion. An atmospheric heat transfer equation was applied to the oil surface as the surface boundary condition. The model was applied to a hypothetical on land release of highly viscous oil in a one-dimensional, downslope form, where the ground slope was assumed constant along the flow path. As the oil progresses downslope, its temperature was updated each time step in each cell and used to calculate new oil properties for density, specific heat, viscosity, and shear stress. The model results provide information about the rate and total distance travelled and time for the downslope flow to stop.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Zayko ◽  
Margarita Eglit

<p>Hydrodynamic instability of open flows down inclines is an important phenomenon which leads perturbation growth, turbulence, roll waves formation etc. It has been widely studied for flows of Newtonian rheology with respect to longitudinal perturbations (perturbations that spread along the flow velocity vector), for example, see works [1 - 4]. From mathematical point of view, the study of the stability of open flow down an inclined planes with respect to two- or three-dimensional perturbations (i.e., with respect to oblique perturbations, spreading under an arbitrary angle to the flow velocity vector) is quite difficult, especially, if the fluid has non-Newtonian rheological properties, which can be important in the context of geophysical applications. Nonetheless, works exist, where these two factors (non-Newtonian rheology of the moving medium and arbitrary angle of spreading of perturbations) are taken into account, e.g., [5,6]. In more recent work [5], the problem of downslope flow linear stability is solved in complete formulation (continuity and momentum equations are used with no averaging over the depth, stability with respect to 3D perturbations is studied); this significant work uses complex mathematics, and can be difficult for applications.</p><p>This abstract is based on the work [6], where linear stability analysis was first conducted for the downslope flow that is described by hydraulic equations, but 1) the rheology of the flow and flow regime (laminar or turbulent) were arbitrary, 2) oblique perturbations were taken into account. The stability criterion is obtained analytically, it contains basic flow characteristics and can be applied to the flow if it's depth-averaged velocity <strong><em>u</em></strong>, depth <em>h</em>, relation between the bottom friction and <em>h</em>, <em>u</em> (<em>u</em> is the velocity modulus), slope angle are known. It is shown that the flow can be unstable (i.e., small perturbations grow, and this can lead, for example, to roll waves formation, or turbulisation of the flow) to oblique perturbations, even if standard stability criterion for longitudinal 1D perturbations is satisfied. This takes place, e.g., for dilatant fluids with power law index greater than 2).</p><p>The result is important not only for experimentalists, but for researchers who use numerical modeling, because knowledge of the flow behavior (for example, possible roll waves development) plays crucial role when choosing a computational scheme that will allow one to get the correct result.</p><p>[1] Benjamin T.B. Wave formation in laminar flow down an inclined plane. J. Fluid Mech. 1957. V. 2. P. 554 – 574.</p><p>[2] Yih C-S. Stability of liquid flow down an inclined plane. Phys. Fluids. 1963. V. 6(3). P. 321 – 334.</p><p>[3] Trowbridge J.H. Instability of concentrated free surface flows. J. Geophys. Res. 1987. V. 92(C9). P. 9523 – 9530.</p><p>[4] Coussot P. Steady, laminar, flow of concentrated mud suspensions in open channel. J. Hydraul. Res. 1994. V. 32. P. 535 – 559.</p><p>[5] Mogilevskiy E. Stability of a non-Newtonian falling film due to three-dimensional disturbances. Phys. Fluids. 2020. V. 32. 073101.</p><p>[6] Zayko J., Eglit M. Stability of downslope flows to two-dimensional perturbations. Phys. Fluids. 2019. V. 31. No. 8. 086601.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joohee Jo ◽  
Dohyeong Kim ◽  
Kyungsik Choi

<p>Intertidal dune morphodynamics is closely tied to bedload transport that is variable in time and space due to the interplay between tide, wave and runoff discharge. Surprisingly the control of intertidal channel morphology on the dune morphodynamics and related bedload transport is scarcely documented. Actively migrating dunes are widely developed in the lower intertidal zone of Yeochari tidal flat in the northern Gyeonggi Bay, west coast of Korea. High-resolution aerial images, high-precision transect profiles, and hydrodynamic dataset were repeatedly obtained and analyzed to quantify the intertidal dune morphodynamics and associated bedload transport, and to address the role of channel morphodynamics. During the research period, the intertidal channel became more sinuous and an ebb barb arose concurrently at the upstream of the channel point bar. The ebb barb exerted a key role in the downstream delivery of fine-grained sediments onto the areas covered by dunes and the intertidal channel by reinforcing ebb currents with a pronounced time-velocity asymmetry. The presence of the ebb barb resulted in a rapid decrease of the width/depth ratio of the channel that had migrated laterally 130 m in six years. After the ebb-barb development, the heights and steepness (height/wavelength) of dunes on the point bar and near the ebb barb decreased notably. Simultaneously dune migration rate had increased from 0.5 m/day to 2.5 m/day, which decreases away from the channel. Bedload transport estimated by using Meyer-Peter and Muller (MPM) equation and Dune-Tracking Method (DTM) also decreases away from the channel. Bedload transport calculated by DTM (qb<sub>DTM</sub>, 0.03-0.38 m<sup>2</sup>/day) is much smaller than that estimated by MPM (qb<sub>MPM</sub>, 0.10-4.17 m<sup>2</sup>/day) by a factor of 1.5 to 62. The discrepancy ratio between the two bedload estimates (qb<sub>MPM</sub>/qb<sub>DTM</sub>) increases toward the channel and the ebb barb. Downslope flow toward the channel during the late stage of ebb tide may account for the underestimation of qb<sub>DTM</sub> by facilitating downslope sediment transport that reduced the dune steepness with the infilling of dune trough. The present study showcased a dynamic response of the dune morphodynamics and associated bedload transport in the open-coast tidal flats to the changes in the channel morphodynamics that is controlled by seasonal runoff discharge as well as tidal currents.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 100 (11) ◽  
pp. 2137-2145 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Lagouvardos ◽  
V. Kotroni ◽  
T. M. Giannaros ◽  
S. Dafis

AbstractOn 23 July 2018, Attica, Greece, was impacted by a major wildfire that took place in a wildland–urban interface area and exhibited extreme fire behavior, characterized by a very high rate of spread. One-hundred civilian fatalities were registered, establishing this wildfire as the second-deadliest weather-related natural disaster in Greece, following the heat wave of July 1987. On the day of the deadly wildfire, a very strong westerly flow was blowing for more than 10 h over Attica. Wind gusts up to 30–34 m s−1 occurred over the mountainous areas of Attica, with 20–25 m s−1 in the city of Athens and surrounding suburban areas. This strong westerly flow interacted with the local topography and acted as downslope flow over the eastern part of Attica, with temperatures rising up to 39°C and relative humidity dropping to 19% prior to the onset of the wildfire. These weather elements are widely acknowledged as the major contributing factors to extreme fire behavior. WRF-SFIRE correctly predicted the spatiotemporal distribution of the fire spread and demonstrated its utility for fire spread warning purposes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 145 (10) ◽  
pp. 4171-4186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer C. DeHart ◽  
Robert A. Houze

Airborne radar data collected within Hurricane Karl (2010) provide a high-resolution glimpse of variations in the vertical precipitation structure around complex terrain in eastern Mexico. Widespread precipitation north of Karl’s track traced the strong gradient of terrain, suggesting orographic enhancement. Although the airborne radar did not sample the period of peak precipitation, time series of surface rainfall at three locations near the inner core show greater precipitation where flow was oriented to rise over the terrain. In regions of upslope flow, radar observations reveal reflectivity enhancement within 1–2 km of the surface. The shallow nature of the enhancement points to orographically generated cloud water accreted by falling drops as a mechanism consistent with prior studies, while the heterogeneous nature of the enhancement suggests shallow convection was playing a role. In contrast, regions of downslope flow were characterized by uniform reflectivity above the ground and fallstreaks originating above the melting level. Unlike most previously studied tropical cyclones passing over topography, Karl made landfall on a mountainous continent, not an island. As Karl weakened and decayed over land, the vertical structure of the radar echo deteriorated north of the storm center, and infrared satellite imagery revealed a strong reduction in the upper-level cloud coverage; however, a small region of intense convection appeared and produced locally heavy rainfall as Karl was close to dissipation. These results indicate that orographic modification processes in a landfalling tropical cyclone are not static, and surface precipitation is highly sensitive to the changes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 810 ◽  
pp. 392-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arjun Jagannathan ◽  
Kraig B. Winters ◽  
Laurence Armi

We investigate the dynamic stability of stratified flow configurations characteristic of hydraulically controlled downslope flow over topography. Extraction of the correct ‘base state’ for stability analysis from spatially and temporally evolving flows that exhibit instability is not easy since the observed flow in most cases has already been modified by nonlinear interactions between the instability modes and the mean flow. Analytical studies, however, can yield steady solutions under idealized conditions which can then be analysed for stability. Following the latter approach, we study flow profiles whose essential character is determined by recently obtained solutions of Winters & Armi (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 753, 2014, pp. 80–103) for topographically controlled stratified flows. Their condition of optimal control necessitates a streamline bifurcation which then naturally produces a stagnant isolating layer overlying an accelerating stratified jet in the lee of the topography. We show that the inclusion of the isolating layer is an essential component of the stability analysis and further clarify the nature and mechanism of the instability in light of the wave-interaction theory. The spatial stability problem is also briefly examined in order to estimate the downstream location where finite-amplitude features might be manifested in streamwise slowly varying flows over topography.


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