Andrew Clope
EF1
I think I'm starting to understand this and why it matters, but like everything meteorology, it seems that just when I think I'm understanding something, I find out that I have no clue and I'm just scratching the surface.
But can someone run through the mixing out of a layer and why it's good or bad? Maybe that's way too broad of a question to ask. If so I apologize.
I would think that you'd rather the layer be well mixed as it may be more consistent that way and easier to predict for? If not mixed, couldn't the moisture variable change drastically over a given period of time? Also, what determines how deeply a moisture layer will mix upwards? Is there a parameter that ultimately limits this? Or is it just the overall amount and quantity of moisture available which dictates how deeply it will mix and how deep the moisture will be?
Thanks, and sorry for the possibly very broad question!
But can someone run through the mixing out of a layer and why it's good or bad? Maybe that's way too broad of a question to ask. If so I apologize.
I would think that you'd rather the layer be well mixed as it may be more consistent that way and easier to predict for? If not mixed, couldn't the moisture variable change drastically over a given period of time? Also, what determines how deeply a moisture layer will mix upwards? Is there a parameter that ultimately limits this? Or is it just the overall amount and quantity of moisture available which dictates how deeply it will mix and how deep the moisture will be?
Thanks, and sorry for the possibly very broad question!