Aircraft Observations of Offshore-directed Flow near Wide Bay, Alaska

1993 
Abstract The effects of the upstream orography of the Alaska peninsula on the low-level flow in the coastal region are studied using observations from two NOAA P-3 research flights. The terrain in this region includes a low sill at Wide Day (approximately 300 m high and 80 km wide), which is flanked by moderate terrain to the southwest (∼900 m high) and higher terrain to the northeast (∼1500 m high). For the case of 26 February 1987, a large Froude number (Fr ∼ 1.6) characterized the incident flow. Boundary-layer wind speeds were approximately 30 m s−1 downstream of the gap at Wide Bay and the moderate terrain. The cross-terrain component of the wind above the boundary layer was 24 m s−1 upstream of the barrier and as lame as 45 m s−1 approximately 70 km downstream of the barrier. Wind speeds were significantly less above and downstream of this wind maximum, as with a hydraulic jump. A prominent trough in sea level pressure was observed in the lee of the higher terrain; the largest 100-m wind speeds (∼34 ...
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