4.6 Article

Aircraft observations and sub-km modelling of the lake-land breeze circulation over Lake Victoria

Journal

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
Volume 148, Issue 743, Pages 557-580

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/qj.4155

Keywords

East Africa; Lake Victoria; lake-land breeze circulation; observations; research aircraft

Funding

  1. UK National Centre for Atmospheric Science
  2. UKAID through WISER HIGHWAY project
  3. GCRF African SWIFT [NE/P021077/1]
  4. Future Climate for Africa (FCFA) HyCRISTAL [NE/M019985/1]
  5. NERC SPHERES DTP [NE/L002574/1]
  6. UK Met Office
  7. NERC/GCRF ACREW [NE/R000034/1]
  8. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/M02038X/1] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study observed the circulation of lake-land breeze over Lake Victoria in unprecedented detail, with significant findings on lake and land breezes, as well as the convergence at the leading edge of the land breeze. The MetUM simulations were able to reasonably reproduce the lake breeze front and its propagation, but further investigation is needed to address biases in timing, resolution, and boundary-layer depth. Overall, the pilot campaign provided valuable insights into the lake-land breeze circulation and motivates the need for a more comprehensive field campaign in the future.
The lake-land breeze circulation over Lake Victoria was observed in unprecedented detail with a research aircraft during the HyVic pilot flight campaign in January 2019. An evening and morning flight observed the lake and land breezes respectively under mostly dry conditions. The circulation was observed at various heights along a transect across the lake and onshore in Tanzania. Profiles of the lower troposphere were recorded by dropsondes over the lake and land. Convection-permitting MetUM simulations with different horizontal grid-spacings (including sub-km) were run for the flight periods. During the evening flight, the aircraft crossed the lake breeze front over land at 1627 LT, approximately 50 km to the east of the lake shore, recording a 6 g center dot kg-1 decrease in specific humidity and reversal in wind direction over similar to 5 km. During the morning flight, a shallow land breeze was observed across the eastern shore at 0545 LT. At least one region of increased and deeper moisture (previously seen in simulations but never observed) was sampled over the lake surface between 0527 and 0855 LT. This bulge of moisture was likely formed from the lifting of near-surface moist air above the lake by low-level convergence. The observations and model simulations suggest that low-level convergence occurred at the leading edge of the land breeze, which had detached from the main land breeze and independently propagated westward across the lake with wave-like characteristics. The MetUM simulations were able to reasonably reproduce the lake breeze front, bulge feature, and its propagation, which is a major achievement given the sparse observational data for model initialisation in this region. However, some timing, resolution and boundary-layer depth biases require further investigation. Overall, this pilot campaign provided an unprecedented snapshot of the Lake Victoria lake-land breeze circulation and motivates a more comprehensive field campaign in the future.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available