Using commercial aircraft meteorological data to assess the heat budget of the convective boundary layer over the Santiago valley in central Chile
Author
dc.contributor.author
Muñoz Magnino, Ricardo Carlos
Author
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Whiteman, C. David
Author
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Garreaud Salazar, René Darío
Author
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Rutllant Costa, José Angel Juan
Author
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Hidalgo, Jacqueline
Admission date
dc.date.accessioned
2022-12-13T15:46:04Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2022-12-13T15:46:04Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2022
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
Boundary-Layer Meteorology (2022) 183:295–319
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1007/s10546-021-00685-3
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/189732
Abstract
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The World Meteorological Organization Aircraft Meteorological Data Relay (AMDAR) programme refers to meteorological data gathered by commercial aircraft and made available to weather services. It has become a major source of upper-air observations whose assimilation into global models has greatly improved their performance. Near busy airports, AMDAR data generate semi-continuous vertical profiles of temperature and winds, which have been utilized to produce climatologies of atmospheric-boundary-layer (ABL) heights and general characterizations of specific cases. We analyze 2017-2019 AMDAR data for Santiago airport, located in the centre of a 40 x 100 km(2) subtropical semi-arid valley in central Chile, at the foothills of the Andes. Profiles derived from AMDAR data are characterized and validated against occasional radiosondes launched in the valley and compared with routine operational radiosondes and with reanalysis data. The cold-season climatology of AMDAR temperatures reveals a deep nocturnal inversion reaching up to 700m above ground level (a.g.l.) and daytime warming extending up to 1000m a.g.l. Convective-boundary-layer (CBL) heights are estimated based on AMDAR profiles and the daytime heat budget of the CBL is assessed. The CBL warming variability is well explained by the surface sensible heat flux estimated with sonic anemometer measurements at one site, provided advection of the cool coastal ABL existing to the west is included. However, the CBL warming accounts for just half of the mean daytime warming of the lower troposphere, suggesting that rather intense climatological diurnal subsidence affects the dynamics of the daytime valley ABL. Possible sources of this subsidence are discussed.
es_ES
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
FONDECYT Grant of the Chilean Agency for Research and Development ANID 1170214
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Springer
es_ES
Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States