Abstract
The three-dimensional responses of simple stably stratified barotropic and baroclinic flows to prescribed diabatic forcing are investigated using a dry, hydrostatic, primitive equation numerical model (the North Carolina State University Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Model). A time-dependent diabatic forcing is utilized to isolate the effects of latent heat release in a midlatitude convective system. Examination of the mass-momentum adjustments to the diabatic forcing is performed with a focus on the development of an isolated midlevel wind maximum. The results of both cases suggest the formation of a midlevel wind maximum in the form of a perturbation meso-β-scale cyclone, which later propagates downstream as the heating is decreased. The scale of the perturbation cyclone remains at a sub-Rossby radius of deformation length scale. Therefore, the mass perturbations adjust to the wind perturbations as the mesocyclone propagates downstream. Transverse vertical circulations, which favor ascent on the right flank of the wind maximum, appear to be attributed to compensatory gravity wave motions, initially triggered by the thermal forcing, which laterally disperses as the heating is reduced.
The simple model simulations are used to explain more complex results from a previous mesoscale modeling study (the Mesoscale Atmospheric Simulation System, MASS), in which it was hypothesized that an upstream mesoscale convective complex triggered a midlevel jetlet through geostrophic adjustment of the wind to the latent heat source. The MASS simulated jetlet attained a transverse vertical circulation that favored ascent on the right flank of the midlevel jetlet. The jetlet and accompanying transverse vertical circulations later propagated downstream aiding in the formation of the 27–28 March 1994 tornadic environment in Alabama and Georgia.
Corresponding author address: Dr. Yuh-Lang Lin, Dept. of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-8208.
Email: yl_lin@ncsu.edu