1. The Distinct Spatial Patterns and Physical Mechanisms of Coastal Boundary Layer Jets over the Northern South China Sea.
- Author
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Du, Tianrui, Zhi, Xiefei, Wang, Yuhong, Zhou, Liqun, Zhang, Ling, and Zhu, Shoupeng
- Abstract
Two distinct spatial patterns of coastal boundary layer jets in the northern South China Sea (CBLJ-NSCS) in June 2015–22 are investigated using hourly output data from the Weather Research and Forecasting Model with a horizontal grid spacing of 9 km and ERA5 data. Spatial pattern 1 shows a high-incidence core on the east side of Hainan Island, while pattern 2 features dual high-incidence cores covering both the east side of Hainan Island and the waters south of Guangdong, with the latter being stronger and more extensive. Unique diurnal cycles have been observed in different high-incidence cores of CBLJ-NSCS: the western core, on the east side of Hainan Island, peaks at night and shows a secondary afternoon subpeak, while the eastern core, located south of Guangdong, reaches its maximum intensity at night with a morning subpeak. Inertial oscillations triggered by large-scale perturbation wind circulation and momentum propagation from upstream Indochina Peninsula CBLJs explain the nocturnal enhancement of both cores. The thermal effect exerted by Hainan Island largely contributes to the afternoon enhancement in the western core. The formation of the morning subpeak of the eastern core results from strong convergence and lifting in the northeast region of it. When upstream CBLJs along the Annamite Range intensify, more momentum is propagated to the eastern core instead of the western one due to wind field changes, which promotes the transition from spatial pattern 1 to pattern 2. Significance Statement: Two spatial patterns of coastal boundary layer jets in the northern South China Sea have been identified. Spatial pattern 1 shows a high-incidence core on the east side of Hainan Island, while pattern 2 features dual high-incidence cores covering both the east side of Hainan Island and the waters south of Guangdong. The transition between these two spatial patterns is related to low-level westerly winds along the coast of the Annamite Range. This study has uncovered the novel spatial pattern of coastal boundary layer jets in the northern South China Sea and provides new insights into precipitation research in southern China, considering the substantial influence of these jets on coastal weather. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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