An interesting mixing-fog event was identified during IOP7 of the C-FOG project, where
a cold front arriving from the north-east collided with the Downs peninsula in Ferryland,
Newfoundland, to produce foggy conditions. A comprehensive set of field observations
suggests that this collision caused turbulent mixing of nearly saturated ambient air with
an almost saturated cold front, creating conditions for mixing fog. Laboratory
experiments were performed to study the interaction of lock-exchange induced gravity
currents with a (rectangular) obstacle to delve into physical processes underlying this
phenomenon. Instantaneous velocity and density fields were obtained using particle
image velocimetry and planar laser-induced fluorescence. The observations suggest
that the obstacle starts affecting the approaching gravity-current propagation at an
upstream distance of 2 H and, upon collision, the mixing is taking place over a spatial
scale of 0.83 H , where H is the depth of the ambient fluid layer. The time for largerscale
turbulent stirring to permeate to the smallest scales of turbulence and activate
the condensation nuclei was estimated as 3t * , where ??* = v??/??' is the intrinsic
time scale of the gravity current and g' the reduced gravity. Extrapolation of results to
IOP7 showed a good agreement with observations.
Published: December 31, 2021
Citation
Bardoel S., D.H. Muñoz, A. Grachev, R. Krishnamurthy, L. Chamorro Chavez, and H. Fernando. 2021.Fog Formation Related to Gravity Currents Interacting with Coastal Topography.Boundary-Layer Meteorology 181, no. 2-3:499-521.PNNL-SA-158475.doi:10.1007/s10546-021-00638-w