Surface stress in offshore flow and quasi-frictional decoupling
Authors
Mahrt, L.
Vickers, Dean
Sun, Jielun
Crawford, Timothy L.
Crescenti, Gennaro
Frederickson, Paul
Advisors
Second Readers
Subjects
Date of Issue
2001-09-27
Date
Publisher
Language
Abstract
Aircraft data collected at approximately 15 m above the sea surface in the
coastal zone are analyzed to examine the spatial distribution of surface stress. Advection
of stronger turbulence from land dominates the near-surface turbulence for the first few
kilometers offshore. With offshore flow of warm air over cold water, strong stratification
leads to very small surface stress. Because the stability restricts the momentum transfer to
the waves, the aerodynamic surface roughness decreases to very small values, which in
turn decreases atmospheric mixing. The redevelopment of the boundary layer farther
downstream is examined. Computation of fluxes from observations for stable cases is
difficult due to a variety of errors including large random flux errors, possible instrumental
loss of small-scale flux, difference between the surface flux and that at the observational
level, and inadvertent capture of mesoscale motions in the computed turbulent
fluctuations. Although the errors appear to be substantial, the aircraft momentum fluxes
compare favorably with those from sonic anemometers on two buoys and a tower at the
end of a 570-m pier, even with near collapse of the turbulence.
Type
Article
Description
Series/Report No
Department
Meteorology
Organization
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Format
Citation
Journal of Geophysical Reserach, Vol. 106, No. D18, Pages 20,629-20,639, September 27, 2001.
Distribution Statement
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
