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Characterizing Thunderstorm Gust Fronts near Complex Terrain
by
Friedrich, Katja
, Rodell, Christopher E.
, Luchetti, Nicholas T.
, Lundquist, Julie K.
in
Aerodynamics
/ Air safety
/ Airports
/ Aviation
/ complex terrain
/ Convection
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Fire behavior
/ Fire protection
/ Fire safety
/ Firefighters
/ Fires
/ Fronts
/ Gust front
/ gust fronts
/ Humidity
/ Instruments
/ Kinetic energy
/ Microwave radiometers
/ Mountains
/ Outflow
/ Radiometers
/ Relative humidity
/ Severe storms
/ Structural engineering
/ Temperature
/ Terrain
/ thunderstorm
/ Thunderstorm outflow
/ Thunderstorms
/ Turbine engines
/ Turbines
/ Turbulence
/ Turbulent kinetic energy
/ Vertical motion
/ Vertical profiles
/ wind energy
/ Wind power
/ Wind profiles
/ Wind speed
/ Wind turbines
2020
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Characterizing Thunderstorm Gust Fronts near Complex Terrain
by
Friedrich, Katja
, Rodell, Christopher E.
, Luchetti, Nicholas T.
, Lundquist, Julie K.
in
Aerodynamics
/ Air safety
/ Airports
/ Aviation
/ complex terrain
/ Convection
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Fire behavior
/ Fire protection
/ Fire safety
/ Firefighters
/ Fires
/ Fronts
/ Gust front
/ gust fronts
/ Humidity
/ Instruments
/ Kinetic energy
/ Microwave radiometers
/ Mountains
/ Outflow
/ Radiometers
/ Relative humidity
/ Severe storms
/ Structural engineering
/ Temperature
/ Terrain
/ thunderstorm
/ Thunderstorm outflow
/ Thunderstorms
/ Turbine engines
/ Turbines
/ Turbulence
/ Turbulent kinetic energy
/ Vertical motion
/ Vertical profiles
/ wind energy
/ Wind power
/ Wind profiles
/ Wind speed
/ Wind turbines
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Characterizing Thunderstorm Gust Fronts near Complex Terrain
by
Friedrich, Katja
, Rodell, Christopher E.
, Luchetti, Nicholas T.
, Lundquist, Julie K.
in
Aerodynamics
/ Air safety
/ Airports
/ Aviation
/ complex terrain
/ Convection
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Fire behavior
/ Fire protection
/ Fire safety
/ Firefighters
/ Fires
/ Fronts
/ Gust front
/ gust fronts
/ Humidity
/ Instruments
/ Kinetic energy
/ Microwave radiometers
/ Mountains
/ Outflow
/ Radiometers
/ Relative humidity
/ Severe storms
/ Structural engineering
/ Temperature
/ Terrain
/ thunderstorm
/ Thunderstorm outflow
/ Thunderstorms
/ Turbine engines
/ Turbines
/ Turbulence
/ Turbulent kinetic energy
/ Vertical motion
/ Vertical profiles
/ wind energy
/ Wind power
/ Wind profiles
/ Wind speed
/ Wind turbines
2020
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Characterizing Thunderstorm Gust Fronts near Complex Terrain
Journal Article
Characterizing Thunderstorm Gust Fronts near Complex Terrain
2020
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Overview
Fire safety, aviation, wind energy, and structural-engineering operations are impacted by thunderstorm outflow boundaries or gust fronts (GFs) particularly when they occur in mountainous terrain. For example, during the 2013 Arizona Yarnell Hill Fire, 19 firefighters were killed as a result of sudden changes in fire behavior triggered by a passing GF. Knowledge of GF behavior in complex terrain also determines departure and landing operations at nearby airports, and GFs can induce exceptional structural loads on wind turbines. While most examinations of GF characteristics focus on well-organized convection in areas such as the Great Plains, here the investigation is broadened to explore GF characteristics that evolve near the complex terrain of the Colorado Rocky Mountains. Using in situ observations from meteorological towers, as well as data from wind-profiling lidars and a microwave radiometer, 24 GF events are assessed to quantify changes in wind, temperature, humidity, and turbulence in the lowest 300 m AGL as these GFs passed over the instruments. The changes in magnitude for all variables are on average weaker in the Colorado Front Range than those typically observed from organized, severe storms in flatter regions. Most events from this study experience an increase in wind speed from 1 to 8 m s −1 , relative humidity from 1% to 8%, and weak vertical motion from 0.3 to 3.6 m s −1 during GF passage while temperature drops by 0.2°–3°C and turbulent kinetic energy peaks at >4 m 2 s −2 . Vertical profiles reveal that these changes vary little with height in the lowest 300 m.
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