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Evolution of an atmospheric Kármán vortex street from high-resolution satellite winds: Guadalupe Island case study
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  • Akos Horvath,
  • Wayne Bresky,
  • Jaime Daniels,
  • Jur Vogelzang,
  • Ad Stoffelen,
  • James L Carr,
  • Dong L. Wu,
  • Chellappan Seethala,
  • Tobias Günther,
  • Stefan Alexander Buehler
Akos Horvath
University of Hamburg

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Wayne Bresky
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
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Jaime Daniels
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
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Jur Vogelzang
Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute
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Ad Stoffelen
Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute
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James L Carr
Carr Astronautics Corporation
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Dong L. Wu
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
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Chellappan Seethala
Finnish Meteorological Institute
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Tobias Günther
ETH Zürich
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Stefan Alexander Buehler
Universität Hamburg
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Abstract

Vortex streets formed in the stratocumulus-capped wake of mountainous islands are the atmospheric analogues of the classic Kármán vortex street observed in laboratory flows past bluff bodies. The quantitative analysis of these mesoscale unsteady atmospheric flows has been hampered by the lack of satellite wind retrievals of sufficiently high spatial and temporal resolution. Taking advantage of the cutting-edge Advanced Baseline Imager, we derived km-scale cloud-motion winds at 5-minute frequency for a vortex street in the lee of Guadalupe Island imaged by Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-16. Combined with Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer data, the geostationary imagery also provided accurate stereo cloud-top heights. The time series of geostationary winds, supplemented with snapshots of ocean surface winds from the Advanced Scatterometer, allowed us to capture the wake oscillations and measure vortex shedding dynamics. The retrievals revealed a markedly asymmetric vortex decay, with cyclonic eddies having larger peak vorticities than anticyclonic eddies at the same downstream location. Drawing on the vast knowledge accumulated about laboratory bluff body flows, we argue that the asymmetric island wake arises due to the combined effects of Earth’s rotation and Guadalupe’s non-axisymmetric shape resembling an inclined flat plate at low angle of attack. The asymmetric vortex decay implies a three-dimensional wake structure, where centrifugal or elliptical instabilities selectively destabilize anticyclonic eddies by introducing edge-mode or core-mode vertical perturbations to the clockwise-rotating vortex tubes.
27 Feb 2020Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres volume 125 issue 4. 10.1029/2019JD032121