Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale Resolution

Abstract Secondary disturbances spawning frontal waves along the fronts of mature midlatitude low‐pressure systems were identified decades ago from satellite images and during field campaigns. Today's flagship supercomputers allow performing simulations at kilometer‐scale resolution on computat...

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Main Authors: David Leutwyler, Christoph Schär
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union (AGU) 2019-11-01
Series:Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Subjects:
GPU
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2019MS001847
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spelling doaj-1f1a171611354d08acd1d3b3b6b0fba22020-11-25T02:12:58ZengAmerican Geophysical Union (AGU)Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems1942-24662019-11-0111113390340210.1029/2019MS001847Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale ResolutionDavid Leutwyler0Christoph Schär1Atmospheric and Climate Science ETH Zürich Zürich SwitzerlandAtmospheric and Climate Science ETH Zürich Zürich SwitzerlandAbstract Secondary disturbances spawning frontal waves along the fronts of mature midlatitude low‐pressure systems were identified decades ago from satellite images and during field campaigns. Today's flagship supercomputers allow performing simulations at kilometer‐scale resolution on computational domains covering the entire lifecycle of synoptic‐scale systems and thus enable explicit representation of small‐scale disturbances embedded in large‐scale circulations. Here we demonstrate these capabilities in two different types of kilometer‐scale simulations. The first is a 10‐day‐long near‐global simulation of an idealized moist baroclinic wave, performed at 1 km grid spacing and employing 16,001 × 36,006 × 60 grid points. The second is a real‐case simulation of an extratropical low‐pressure system, driven by the European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts's operational analysis. At kilometer‐scale resolution, both simulations display clear evidence of embedded mesoscale vortices spawning along frontal systems of mature extratropical cyclones. The vortices appearing in the real‐case simulation can also be identified in satellite imagery of the system. The simulated developments are due to a barotropic instability mechanism and driven by strong low‐level horizontal wind shear. While the simulation of the frontal systems is amenable at model resolutions around 10–50 km, the instability mechanism itself relies on the representation of a narrow shear zone, requiring about 5 times finer resolution. Results suggest that the flow regimes suppressing or fostering barotropic vortices can coexist in the same synoptic system. Far away from the cyclone core, the instability is suppressed by deformation associated with the large‐scale flow, while close to the mature cyclone core, the narrow frontal structure becomes unstable.https://doi.org/10.1029/2019MS001847barotropic instabilityidealized baroclinic wavemesovortexconvection‐resolvinggraphics processing unitGPU
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Leutwyler
Christoph Schär
spellingShingle David Leutwyler
Christoph Schär
Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale Resolution
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
barotropic instability
idealized baroclinic wave
mesovortex
convection‐resolving
graphics processing unit
GPU
author_facet David Leutwyler
Christoph Schär
author_sort David Leutwyler
title Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale Resolution
title_short Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale Resolution
title_full Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale Resolution
title_fullStr Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale Resolution
title_full_unstemmed Barotropic Instability of a Cyclone Core at Kilometer‐Scale Resolution
title_sort barotropic instability of a cyclone core at kilometer‐scale resolution
publisher American Geophysical Union (AGU)
series Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
issn 1942-2466
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Secondary disturbances spawning frontal waves along the fronts of mature midlatitude low‐pressure systems were identified decades ago from satellite images and during field campaigns. Today's flagship supercomputers allow performing simulations at kilometer‐scale resolution on computational domains covering the entire lifecycle of synoptic‐scale systems and thus enable explicit representation of small‐scale disturbances embedded in large‐scale circulations. Here we demonstrate these capabilities in two different types of kilometer‐scale simulations. The first is a 10‐day‐long near‐global simulation of an idealized moist baroclinic wave, performed at 1 km grid spacing and employing 16,001 × 36,006 × 60 grid points. The second is a real‐case simulation of an extratropical low‐pressure system, driven by the European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts's operational analysis. At kilometer‐scale resolution, both simulations display clear evidence of embedded mesoscale vortices spawning along frontal systems of mature extratropical cyclones. The vortices appearing in the real‐case simulation can also be identified in satellite imagery of the system. The simulated developments are due to a barotropic instability mechanism and driven by strong low‐level horizontal wind shear. While the simulation of the frontal systems is amenable at model resolutions around 10–50 km, the instability mechanism itself relies on the representation of a narrow shear zone, requiring about 5 times finer resolution. Results suggest that the flow regimes suppressing or fostering barotropic vortices can coexist in the same synoptic system. Far away from the cyclone core, the instability is suppressed by deformation associated with the large‐scale flow, while close to the mature cyclone core, the narrow frontal structure becomes unstable.
topic barotropic instability
idealized baroclinic wave
mesovortex
convection‐resolving
graphics processing unit
GPU
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2019MS001847
work_keys_str_mv AT davidleutwyler barotropicinstabilityofacyclonecoreatkilometerscaleresolution
AT christophschar barotropicinstabilityofacyclonecoreatkilometerscaleresolution
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