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Sea‐land breeze development during a summer bora event along the north‐eastern Adriatic coast
The interaction of a summer frontal bora and the sea‐land breeze along the north‐eastern Adriatic coast was investigated by means of numerical simulations and available observations. Available measurements (in situ, radiosonde, satellite images) provided model validation. The modelled wind field rev...
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Published in: | Quarterly journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 2010-07, Vol.136 (651), p.1554-1571 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The interaction of a summer frontal bora and the sea‐land breeze along the north‐eastern Adriatic coast was investigated by means of numerical simulations and available observations. Available measurements (in situ, radiosonde, satellite images) provided model validation. The modelled wind field revealed several regions where the summer bora (weaker than 6 m s−1) allowed sea‐breeze development: in the western parts of the Istrian peninsula and Rijeka Bay and along the north‐western coast of the island of Rab. Along the western Istrian coast, the position of the narrow convergence zone that formed depended greatly on the balance between the bora jets northward and southward of Istria. In the case of a strong northern (Trieste) bora jet, the westerly Istrian onshore flow presented the superposition of the dominant swirled bora flow and local weak thermal flow. It collided then with the easterly bora flow within the zone. With weakening of the Trieste bora jet, the convergence zone was a result of the pure westerly sea breeze and the easterly bora wind. In general, during a bora event, sea breezes were somewhat later and shorter, with limited horizontal extent. The spatial position of the convergence zone caused by the bora and sea‐breeze collision was strongly curved. The orientation of the head (of the thermally‐induced flow) was more in the vertical causing larger horizontal pressure gradients and stronger daytime maximum wind speed than in undisturbed conditions. Except for the island of Rab, other lee‐side islands in the area investigated did not provide favourable conditions for the sea‐breeze formation. Within a bora wake near the island of Krk, onshore flow occurred as well, although not as a sea‐breeze flow, but as the bottom branch of the lee rotor that was associated with the hydraulic jump‐like feature in the lee of the Velika Kapela Mountain. Copyright © 2010 Royal Meteorological Society |
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ISSN: | 0035-9009 1477-870X 1477-870X |
DOI: | 10.1002/qj.649 |