Friday, June 10, 2011

Left-Side Only

On a sunny day at the beach, the wind tends to blow towards the shore. The land warms up more than the water and warm air rises off the land. The air moving upwards sucks air sideways off the water to make the on-shore breeze. We wonder if our simulation will do something similar if we heat cells only on the left side of the array. The left-side would simulate land, and the right side would simulate water. We might see cells moving along the surface from the right, warming on the left, rising up to the top, and cooling as the move to the right again.

The figure below shows our Circulating Cells simulation program, Version 6.0, which you can download by clicking CC6. With the Left_Only box checked and Planetary Greenhouse heating, the surface cells on the left side receive twice the normal heat from the sun, while those on the right side receive none at all.



We started the simulation by loading the equilibrium state of the array with both sides receiving heat, which we have saved in PGH_Q001_M00. Following our recent discussion of enthalpy, we recognize this symmetric equilibrium state as the one in which all cells have the same enthalpy. Those at the top have more gravitational potential, but less internal heat and pressure energy, so that the sum of all three forms of energy is the same for all cells, or almost the same.

We checked the Left_Only box and increased Q_heating 0.01 K/s. You may point out that the unit of Q_heating should be Kelvin per iteration, not Kelvin per second, but we recall that one iteration corresponds to one second, so the two are equivalent. With Q_heating at 0.01 K/s, the left-side surface cells warm at 0.02 K/s and those on the right do not warm at all.

We ran the simulation for a million iterations and saved the cell array in PGH_Left_Only. The figure above shows the saved state of the cell array, after another ten thousand iterations. The temperature profile is consistent with a large-area circulation of air powered by heating on the left surface. The heated air rises to the tropopause and moves over to the right side as it radiates its heat into space. Once it has cooled, it descends to the right surface and moves along to the left.

We marked a few cells by clicking on them, and watched them go around. We invite you to do the same. The cells circulate in a clockwise direction. They rise to the tropopause on the left, but hardly ever rise to the tropopause on the right. Nevertheless, we don't see individual cells moving steadily in a clockwise direction across the width and height of the array. Often, cells rise on the extreme left and descend upon the center-left. Cells on the right rise up a little and fall again. They slowly drift to the left, but they do a lot of jumping around along the way.

When averaged over thousands of iterations, the combined movement of the cells is a large clockwise circulation, with a net movement of cells from right to left along the surface. But a simulated person standing on the center surface would not feel a steady breeze blowing from the right side. He would instead feel the wind changing every minute or two, and only by looking at the average wind speed would he be able to conclude that the net movement of air was on-shore.

Our simulation assumes that all momentum generated by circulation is dissipated as viscous heat at the end of each circulation. Thus each circulation affects only the temperature of the cells. No cell can build up momentum that encourages further circulation in the same direction.

We conclude that momentum is one of the driving forces behind the on-shore breezes. Buoyancy alone is not sufficient. If we want our simulation to produce steady winds, we must allow circulating cells to retain some of the momentum they gain during circulation, and we must allow this momentum to influence future circulations of the same cell.

5 comments:

  1. I think that if us random examine the system, also the answers will be random unless they won't be somehow mediated.
    Michele

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  2. Dear Michele,

    I'm not sure I agree with you. If I roll a six-sided die ten thousand times, I may not be able to predict each individual roll, but I can tell you that the average roll will be 3.50±0.05 with 95% confidence. In the case of our cells, we select the blocks at random, but we rotate them base upon our impetus for circulation.

    I propose that we allow the cells to retain their momentum after they circulate, so that the next time we pick them, our impetus for circulation must account for the pre-existing momentum. I'm going to try it out and present the results.

    Yours, Kevan

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  3. Peter Newnam sends me to screen shots, one of the left-only planetary greenhouse (constant heat) and one of left-only rotating greenhouse (day-night cycle).

    Constant Heat Left-Only

    Day-Night Heat Left-Only

    We see very little difference between them. Peter wonders why. I guess my answer is that there is not much change at night, because the atmosphere does not cool significantly during the night (4°C), as we saw in our Rotating Greenhouse post. But we also found that the temperature within 30 m of the surface will vary far more (20°C) in Surface Cooling Part VI. Our large-cell simulation does not show us the close-to-surface variation.

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  4. Sorry, I did not explain too clearly my thought.

    My remark was for your assertion “But a simulated person standing on the center surface would not feel a steady breeze blowing from the right side. He would instead feel the wind changing every minute or two, …”

    I claim that the person feels the macroscopic effect, that’s, the average on-shore breeze.

    Michele

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  5. I see what you mean. The time scale of our simulation is one iteration per second, and each cell will tend to move once every 400 s or so, which means that the random changes each last for a few minutes. The man standing on the shore would usually feel the wind blowing to shore, but not always.

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