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Observational Case Study of a Persistent Cold Pool and Gap Flow in the Columbia River Basin
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2021
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Source: Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology, 60(8), 1071-1090
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Journal Title:Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
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Description:Persistent cold pools form as layers of cold stagnant air within topographical depressions mainly during wintertime, when the near-surface air cools and/or the air aloft warms and daytime surface heating is insufficient to mix out the stable layer. An area often affected by persistent cold pools is the Columbia River basin in the Pacific Northwest, when a high pressure system east of the Cascade Range promotes radiative cooling and easterly flow. The only major outflow for the easterly flow is through the narrow Columbia River Gorge that cuts through the north–south-oriented Cascade Range and often experiences very strong gap flows. Observations collected during the Second Wind Forecast Improvement Project (WFIP2) are used to study a persistent cold pool in the Columbia River basin between 10 and 19 January 2017 that was associated with a strong gap flow. We used data from various remote sensing and in situ instruments and an optimal estimation physical retrieval to obtain thermodynamic profiles to address the temporal and spatial characteristics of the cold pool and gap flow and to investigate the physical processes involved during formation, maintenance, and decay. While large-scale temperature advection occurred during all phases, we found that the cold-pool vertical structure was modulated by the existence of low-level clouds and that turbulent shear-induced mixing and downslope wind storms likely played a role during its decay.
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Source:Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology, 60(8), 1071-1090
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