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The effect of the island of Crete on the Etesian winds over the Aegean Sea
Author(s) -
Kotroni Vassiljki,
Lagouvardos Kostas,
Lalas Dimitris
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
quarterly journal of the royal meteorological society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.744
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1477-870X
pISSN - 0035-9009
DOI - 10.1002/qj.49712757604
Subject(s) - geology , prevailing winds , wind direction , airflow , climatology , wind speed , oceanography , mechanical engineering , engineering
The Etesians (northern sector winds), which blow over the Aegean Sea during summer, affect human activities in the area. The numerous islands of the Aegean and especially Crete (a mountainous island in the southern Aegean oriented perpendicular to the surface flow) seem to play an important role in the modification of the wind field during the Etesians. The Crete mountain ranges, surrounded as they are by water, are an excellent example of a major isolated topographic feature which significantly modifies the regional airflow and pressure; however, this modification can hardly be defined due to the lack of observing stations over the sea. For this reason, the available land surface and ship synoptic observations are used, together with ERS scatterometer wind data in order to identify the regions over the Aegean where the wind reaches its maximum intensity, and to assess the influence of Crete on the wind field. Moreover, numerical modelling is used to provide some further insight on the orographically disturbed wind flow. Sensitivity tests performed with the hydrostatic model BOLAM show that the interaction of the Etesian wind flow with the mountains of Crete produces deceleration of the Etesians up to almost 120 km upstream, the leftward deflection of the air as it approaches the mountains, and the associated intensification of the flow east of the island.