Atmosphere (Jun 2024)

Near-Surface Thermodynamic Influences on Evaporation Duct Shape

  • Sarah E. Wessinger,
  • Daniel P. Greenway,
  • Tracy Haack,
  • Erin E. Hackett

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15060718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 718

Abstract

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This study utilizes in situ measurements and numerical weather prediction forecasts curated during the Coupled Air–Sea Processes Electromagnetic Ducting Research (CASPER) east field campaign to assess how thermodynamic properties in the marine atmospheric surface layer influence evaporation duct shape independent of duct height. More specifically, we investigate evaporation duct shape through a duct shape parameter, a parameter known to affect the propagation of X-band radar signals and is directly related to the curvature of the duct. Relationships between this duct shape parameter and air sea temperature difference (ASTD) reveal that during unstable periods (ASTD M-profile. Furthermore, for any specific duct height, a strong linear relationship between the near-surface-specific humidity gradient and the duct shape parameter is found, suggesting that it is primarily driven by near-surface humidity gradients. The results demonstrate that an a priori estimate of duct shape, for a given duct height, is possible if the near-surface humidity gradient is known.

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