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Sea Surface Mixed Layer during the 10ā11 June 1994 California Coastally Trapped Event
- Source :
- Monthly Weather Review. 126:600-619
- Publication Year :
- 1998
- Publisher :
- American Meteorological Society, 1998.
-
Abstract
- A midlevel, coastally trapped atmospheric event occurred along the California coast 10ā11 June 1994. This feature reversed the surface wind field along the coast in a northerly phase progression. Along the central California coast, the winds at the coastal stations reverse before the corresponding coastal buoy offshore, then followed hours later by passage of the leading edge of an overcast stratus cloud. The sea surface temperature was much colder in the narrow strip along the coast. The cloud characteristics may be accounted for by a sea surface mixed layer (SSML) model beginning with the wind reversal and growing with the square root of time. Heat is lost from the SSML to the sea surface. A cloud forms when the air temperature at the top of the SSML is equal to the dewpoint. It is suggested that a bore develops on the top of the SSML, increasing the thickness of the SSML and the progression speed of the cloud to 8 m sā1. There is evidence that an undular bore with a leading cloud develops in t...
Details
- ISSN :
- 15200493 and 00270644
- Volume :
- 126
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Monthly Weather Review
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........ea1bfc15d2f639898af897f23d4480b9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0493(1998)126<0600:ssmldt>2.0.co;2