Cloud-Environment Interface Instability: Part II: Extension to Three Spatial Dimensions
Open Access
- 1 February 1993
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
- Vol. 50 (4) , 555-573
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1993)050<0555:ceiipi>2.0.co;2
Abstract
Three-dimensional numerical experiments were performed with thermals rising in a stably stratified environment to study the cloud-environment boundary instability. This work extends that reported in Part I. It is shown that the analytical theory developed in Part I, which describes the evolution of the laminar interface between the thermal and its environment, applies to the three-dimensional case with only minor modifications. As in the two-dimensional case, the scale selection and growth rate of the unstable modes appear to depend upon the depth and velocity change across the shear layer near the interface, which is in rough agreement with classical linear theory developed for the case of planar geometry. Analysis is presented that indicates further evolution of the three-dimensional eddies results in a transition to turbulence. A decrease of the Taylor-microscale Reynolds number and leveling off of the average enstrophy and velocity-derivative skewness is observed in the numerical experiments,... Abstract Three-dimensional numerical experiments were performed with thermals rising in a stably stratified environment to study the cloud-environment boundary instability. This work extends that reported in Part I. It is shown that the analytical theory developed in Part I, which describes the evolution of the laminar interface between the thermal and its environment, applies to the three-dimensional case with only minor modifications. As in the two-dimensional case, the scale selection and growth rate of the unstable modes appear to depend upon the depth and velocity change across the shear layer near the interface, which is in rough agreement with classical linear theory developed for the case of planar geometry. Analysis is presented that indicates further evolution of the three-dimensional eddies results in a transition to turbulence. A decrease of the Taylor-microscale Reynolds number and leveling off of the average enstrophy and velocity-derivative skewness is observed in the numerical experiments,...Keywords
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