Title
Thermotidal and land-heating forcing of the diurnal cycle of oceanic surface winds in the eastern tropical Pacific
Date Issued
01 February 2012
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
The diurnal cycle in the oceanic surface winds in the tropical eastern Pacific is shown, through numerical experiments with a regional atmospheric model, to be associated with the migrating diurnal atmospheric thermal tide, forced by absorption of solar near-IR radiation by tropospheric water vapor, and a topographically-modified extended sea-breeze, forced by diurnal land heating. Idealized experiments prove capable of discriminating the effects of both processes, showing that beyond 2000km from the coast, the thermal tide is dominant, while closer to the coast both processes are of the same order. The shortwave forcing due to water vapor is also found to produce a diurnal cycle in precipitation, but the process appears to be independent from the thermal tide and it is proposed that this effect is mediated by the radiatively-forced changes in the column stability. Copyright 2012 by the American Geophysical Union.
Volume
39
Issue
4
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas Ingeniería ambiental y geológica Investigación climática
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84863272004
Source
Geophysical Research Letters
ISSN of the container
00948276
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus