Supercritical marine-layer flow along a smoothly varying coastline

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Abstract

The model is motivated by a recent comparison of CODE observations to a simple hydraulic theory, which suggested the presence of an expansion fan and a compression jump downstream of topographic features. The marine layer is modeled as a homogeneous rotating fluid layer decelerated by surface friction and forced by imposed upper-level pressure gradients. The equations are solved by a characteristic-based gridpoint scheme. The results indicate that the expansion fan is a robust feature that persists under most conditions in the present more realistic model, but is dramatically altered in structure by the presence of friction, while the jump may weaken rapidly offshore due mainly to offshore variations of the layer height upstream of the jump. -from Author

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Samelson, R. M. (1992). Supercritical marine-layer flow along a smoothly varying coastline. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 49(17), 1571–1584. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1992)049<1571:SMLFAA>2.0.CO;2

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