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1.
Icarus ; 3732022 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34916707

RESUMEN

The impact of methane convection on the circulation of Titan is investigated in the Titan Atmospheric Model (TAM), using a simplified Betts-Miller (SBM) moist convection parameterization scheme. We vary the reference relative humidity (RHSBM ) and relaxation timescale of convection (τ) parameters of the SBM scheme. Titan's atmosphere is mostly insensitive to changes in τ, but convective instability and precipitation are highly impacted by changes in RHSBM . Convection changes behavior from occurring in infrequent (<1 per Titan year), intense events at summer solstice that quickly encompass the entire globe at low RHSBM to near-continuous precipitation at the poles during summer at high RHSBM (>85%). The intermediate regime (RHSBM =70-80%) consists of frequent events (~10 per Titan year) of moderate intensity that are limited in meridional extent to their respective hemisphere. Using results from the Titan Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (TRAMS) and observations, we tune the parameters of the SBM parameterization with optimum values of RH=80% and τ=28800 s. We present a simulated decadal climatology that qualitatively matches observations of Titan's humidity and cloud activity and generally resembles previous results with TAM. Comparing this simulation to one without moist convection demonstrates that convection strengthens the meridional circulation, warms the mid-levels and cools the surface at the poles, and magnifies zonal-mean global moisture anomalies.

2.
Icarus ; 3732022 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34916708

RESUMEN

The deep convective cloud-environment feedback loop is likely important to Titan's global methane, energy, and momentum cycles, just as it is for Earth's global water, energy, and momentum budgets. General circulation models of Titan's atmosphere are unable to explicitly simulate deep convection and must instead parameterize the impact of this important subgrid-scale phenomenon on the model-resolved atmospheric state. The goal of this study is to better quantify through cloud resolving modeling the effects of deep convective methane storms on their environment and to feed that information forward to improve parameterizations in global models. Dozens of atmospheric profiles unstable with respect to deep moist convection are extracted from the global Titan Atmospheric Model (TAM) and used to initialize the cloud-resolving Titan Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (TRAMS). Mean profiles of heating/cooling and moistening/drying of the large-scale environment in TRAMS indicate that Titan's deep convection forces the environment in a manner analogous to Earth: Large-scale subsidence of the environmental air warms and dries the environment, but clouds can also moisten the environment through the detrainment and evaporation of condensate near cloud top. Relative humidity profiles and characteristic convective time scales are derived to guide the tuning of the deep convective parameterization implemented in TAM, as described in a companion paper. The triggering of convection, the dry convective mixing of the planetary boundary layer, and the entrainment of environmental air into rising air parcels are found to be critical to determining whether a deep convective cloud will form. Only profiles with relatively large convective available potential energy (CAPE) and well mixed planetary boundary layers with high relative humidity were found to produce storms. Environments with low level thermal inversions and planetary boundary layers with low relative humidity or rapidly decreasing moisture with height failed to generate deep convection in TRAMS despite positive CAPE.

3.
Geophys Res Lett ; 48(18)2021 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34776555

RESUMEN

One of the first large cloud systems ever observed on Titan was a stationary event at the southern pole that lasted almost two full Titan days. Its stationary nature and large extent are puzzling given that low-level winds should transport clouds eastward, pointing to a mechanism such as atmospheric waves propagating against the mean flow. We use a composite of 47 large convective events across 15 Titan years of simulations from the Titan Atmospheric Model to show that Rossby waves trigger polar convection-which halts the waves and produces stationary precipitation-and then communicate its impact globally. In the aftermath of the convection, forced waves undergo a complicated evolution, including cross-equatorial propagation and tropical-extratropical interaction. The resulting global impact from convection implies its detectability anywhere on Titan, both via surface measurements of pressure and temperature and through remote observation of the outgoing longwave radiation, which increases by ~0.5% globally.

4.
Icarus ; 291: 203-231, 2017 Jul 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30393391

RESUMEN

A high density of REMS wind measurements were collected in three science investigations during MSL's Bagnold Dunes Campaign, which took place over ~80 sols around southern winter solstice (Ls~90°) and constituted the first in situ analysis of the environmental conditions, morphology, structure, and composition of an active dune field on Mars. The Wind Characterization Investigation was designed to Available online 14 December 2016 fully characterize the near-surface wind field just outside the dunes and confirmed the primarily upslope/downslope flow expected from theory and modeling of the circulation on the slopes of Aeolis Mons in this season. The basic pattern of winds is 'upslope' (from the northwest, heading up Aeolis Mons) during the daytime (~09:00-17:00 or 18:00) and 'downslope' (from the southeast, heading down Aeolis Mons) at night (~20:00 to some time before 08:00). Between these times the wind rotates largely clockwise, giving generally westerly winds mid-morning and easterly winds in the early evening. The timings of these direction changes are relatively consistent from sol to sol; however, the wind direction and speed at any given time shows considerable intersol variability. This pattern and timing is similar to predictions from the MarsWRF numerical model, run at a resolution of ~490 m in this region, although the model predicts the upslope winds to have a stronger component from the E than the W, misses a wind speed peak at ~09:00, and under-predicts the strength of daytime wind speeds by ~2-4 m/s. The Namib Dune Lee Investigation reveals 'blocking' of northerly winds by the dune, leaving primarily a westerly component to the daytime winds, and also shows a broadening of the 1 Hz wind speed distribution likely associated with lee turbulence. The Namib Dune Side Investigation measured primarily daytime winds at the side of the same dune, in support of aeolian change detection experiments designed to put limits on the saltation threshold, and also appears to show the influence of the dune body on the local flow, though less clearly than in the lee. Using a vertical grid with lower resolution near the surface reduces the relative strength of nighttime winds predicted by MarsWRF and produces a peak in wind speed at ~09:00, improving the match to the observed diurnal variation of wind speed, albeit with an offset in magnitude. The annual wind field predicted using this grid also provides a far better match to observations of aeolian dune morphology and motion in the Bagnold Dunes. However, the lower overall wind speeds than observed and disagreement with the observed wind direction at ~09:00 suggest that the problem has not been solved and that alternative boundary layer mixing schemes should be explored which may result in more mixing of momentum down to the near-surface from higher layers. These results demonstrate a strong need for in situ wind data to constrain the setup and assumptions used in numerical models, so that they may be used with more confidence to predict the circulation at other times and locations on Mars.

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