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Mountain Waves
Featuring Scott
Dennstaedt -
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Scott:
"When strong winds are nearly perpendicular to a
mountain range, you can expect mountain waves,
correct? Well not necessarily.
Mountain waves require a very specific
atmospheric structure before waves become
apparent. Reasonably strong and nearly
perpendicular winds along the ridge line are
just one ingredient.
Mountain waves can only exist when there's
unstable air below the ridgeline capped by
stable air above the ridge line. As the buoyant
and unstable air is forced up the ridge into the
stable layer on the windward side, it will be
forced downward on the lee side of the mountain
ridge.
The
air descends back into the unstable layer below
the ridgeline and once again becomes buoyant and
begins to rise back into the stable layer. This
oscillation produces the mountain wave activity.
If
you see a lot of cumulus cloud activity along
the mountain range, this implies the atmosphere
is unstable above the ridgeline. This
environment doesn't support mountain wave
activity."
Next
week's tip: controlling airspeed on ILS
approaches
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