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Characterizing the Severe Turbulence Environments Associated with Commercial Aviation Accidents

Authors :
Kaplan, Michael L
Huffman, Allan W
Lux, Kevin M
Cetola, Jeffrey D
Charney, Joseph J
Riordan, Allen J
Lin, Yuh-Lang
Waight, Kenneth T., III
Proctor, Fred
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2003.

Abstract

Simulation experiments reveal key processes that organize a hydrostatic environment conducive to severe turbulence. The paradigm requires juxtaposition of the entrance region of a curved jet stream, which is highly subgeostrophic, with the entrance region of a straight jet stream, which is highly supergeostrophic. The wind and mass fields become misphased as the entrance regions converge resulting in the significant spatial variation of inertial forcing, centripetal forcing, and along- and cross-stream pressure gradient forcing over a mesobeta scale region. This results in frontogenesis and the along-stream divergence of cyclonic and convergence of cyclonic ageostrophic vertical vorticity. The centripetally forced mesoscale front becomes the locus of large gradients of ageostrophic vertical vorticity along an overturning isentrope. This region becomes favorable for streamwise vorticity gradient formation enhancing the environment for organization of horizontal vortex tubes in the presence of buoyant forcing.

Subjects

Subjects :
Air Transportation And Safety

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
RTOP 728-40-30-01, , 82U-7473-008, , NAS1-99074
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20030014793
Document Type :
Report