Nocturnal Air Seiches in the Arizona Meteor Crater
Abstract
The Arizona Meteor Crater near Winslow, AZ is 170 m deep, has a diameter of 1.2 km, and it has a nearly circular shape. The motivation of the Meteor Crater Experiment (METCRAX), conducted in October 2006, was to use the Meteor Crater as a natural laboratory to study atmospheric phenomena that are typical for small basins. Among other observations, high-resolution wind, temperature and pressure measurements were collected with sonics and microbarometers, respectively, during the entire month. The sensors were mounted between 0.5 m and 8.5 m AGL on seven portable towers, five of which were located within the crater and two on the crater rim. Here we report observations of nocturnal air seiches, that is, standing gravity waves associated with the time-harmonic sloshing of the cold-air pool that forms at the bottom of the crater due to radiative cooling at night. We present time series, spectra, and spectrograms of temperature, wind and pressure fluctuations that characterize those air seiches. Typical seiche periods were 15 min. We compare the observations with the time-harmonic solutions of the shallow-water equation and with numerical simulations.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2011
- Bibcode:
- 2011AGUFM.A53D..04M
- Keywords:
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- 0350 ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE / Pressure;
- density;
- and temperature;
- 3255 MATHEMATICAL GEOPHYSICS / Spectral analysis;
- 3285 MATHEMATICAL GEOPHYSICS / Wave propagation;
- 3307 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Boundary layer processes