National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
NOAA logo PMEL - A leader in developing ocean observing systems

 

FY 1991

Structure of a low-level jet over lower Cook Inlet, Alaska

Macklin, S.A., N.A. Bond, and J.P. Walker

Mon. Weather Rev., 118(12), 2568–2578 (1990)


During February 1982 a NOAA research aircraft investigated a cold, low-level jet blowing from a gap between mountain ranges on the west side of Cook Inlet, Alaska. The jet blew 200 km southeastward across Cook Inlet between the Kenai Peninsula and the Kodiak archipelago, passing into the Gulf of Alaska where it merged with the large-scale marine wind field. Measurement commenced ~35 km downstream of the seaward end of the gap. The jet's internal boundary layer accelerated by 5% and grew 20% in depth for ~50 km; thereafter, wind speed and boundary-layer depth were nearly constant for the next 100 km. The strongest winds (>20 m s–1at a height of 80 m) were observed on the south side of the jet's thermal axis and 90 km downstream from the coast. Budget analyses reveal that the down-gradient acceleration within the jet was principally opposed by surface friction, and the cold air advection was balanced by a strong upward-directed sensible heat flux from Cook Inlet and entrainment of warmer air from aloft.




Contact Sandra Bigley |
Acronyms | Outstanding PMEL Publications
About Us | Research | Publications | Data | Infrastructure | Theme Pages | Education
US Department of Commerce | NOAA | OAR | PMEL
Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory
NOAA /R/PMEL
7600 Sand Point Way NE
Seattle, WA 98115
  Phone: (206) 526-6239
Fax: (206) 526-6815
Contacts
Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Accessibility Statement
oar.pmel.webmaster@noaa.gov
Watch PMEL's YouTube Channel