Affiliation:
1. Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Japan
2. National Defense Academy, Yokosuka, Japan
Abstract
Abstract
Dust devils are small-scale vertical vortices often observed over deserts or bare land during the daytime under fair weather conditions. Previous numerical studies have demonstrated that dust devil–like vertical vortices can be simulated in idealized convective mixed layers in the absence of background winds or environmental shear. Their formation mechanism, however, has not been completely clarified. In this paper, the authors attempt to clarify the vorticity source of a dust devil–like vortex by means of a large-eddy simulation, in which a material surface initially placed in the vortex is tracked backward and the circulation on the material surface is examined. The material surface is found to originate from downdrafts, which already have sufficient circulation. As the material surface converges toward the vortex, the vorticity is increased because of conservation of circulation. It is shown that a convective mixed layer is inherently accompanied by circulation, which is scaled by a product of the convective velocity scale and the depth of the convective mixed layer. This circulation is considered to be originally generated by tilting of baroclinically generated horizontal vorticity principally at middepths of the convective mixed layer.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Cited by
22 articles.
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