Juan F. Salazar
University of Antioquia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Juan F. Salazar.
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2014
Angela M. Rendón; Juan F. Salazar; Carlos A. Palacio; Volkmar Wirth; Björn Brötz
AbstractMany cities located in valleys with limited ventilation experience serious air pollution problems. The ventilation of an urban valley can be limited not only by orographic barriers, but also by urban heat island–induced circulations and/or the capping effect of temperature inversions. Furthermore, land-use/-cover changes caused by urbanization alter the dynamics of temperature inversions and urban heat islands, thereby affecting air quality in an urban valley. By means of idealized numerical simulations, it is shown that in a mountain valley subject to temperature inversions urbanization can have an important influence on air quality through effects on the inversion breakup. Depending on the urban area fraction in the simulations, the breakup time changes, the cross-valley wind system can evolve from a confined to an open system during the daytime, the slope winds can be reversed by the interplay between the urban heat island and the temperature inversion, and the breakup pattern can migrate from ...
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2015
Angela M. Rendón; Juan F. Salazar; Carlos A. Palacio; Volkmar Wirth
AbstractUrban valleys can experience serious air pollution problems as a combined result of their limited ventilation and the high emission of pollutants from the urban areas. Idealized simulations were analyzed to elucidate the breakup of an inversion layer in urban valleys subject to a strong low-level temperature inversion and topographic effects on surface heating such as topographic shading, as well as the associated air pollution transport mechanisms. The results indicate that the presence and evolution in time of the inversion layer and its interplay with an urban heat island within the valley strongly influence the venting of pollutants out of urban valleys. Three mechanisms of air pollution transport were identified. These are transport by upslope winds, transport by an urban heat island–induced circulation, and transport within a closed slope-flow circulation below an inversion layer.
Climate Dynamics | 2018
José A. Posada-Marín; Angela M. Rendón; Juan F. Salazar; John F. Mejia; Juan Camilo Villegas
Precipitation in the tropical Andes is strongly influenced by the ENSO phases and orographic effects. In particular, precipitation can be drastically reduced during El Niño. Decision-making about water resources relies on modelling precipitation as the main source for water availability. Here we evaluate ERA-Interim´s capacity to represent precipitation in the mountainous central Colombian Andes, a strategic region for water supply and hydropower generation, for different phases of ENSO during 1998–2012. Our results show that ERA-Interim fails to reproduce important features of precipitation spatial and temporal variability during different ENSO phases. Most critical in these results is how ERA-Interim overestimates precipitation during the dry season in El Niño years, which corresponds to the most critical condition for water supply. We show that ERA-Interim limitations are likely related to its simplified representation of the complex topography in the region, which excludes the inter-Andean Cauca river valley. To improve this, we implement a dynamical downscaling experiment using the WRF regional climate model, including a sensitivity analysis that considers three convective parameterization schemes and a convection-permitting simulation. WRF downscaling outperforms ERA-Interim in the representation of precipitation during the dry season of El Niño years, especially through correcting positive precipitation biases. This improvement is related to a better representation of orographic effects in WRF simulations. Our results suggest that ERA-Interim and, more generally, climate simulations with comparable coarse resolutions, may produce misleading precipitation overestimations in the tropical Andes if they do not adequately represent inter-Andean valleys, with important implications for water resources management.
Tellus B | 2009
Juan F. Salazar; Germán Poveda
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2017
Juan F. Salazar; Juan Camilo Villegas; Angela M. Rendón; Estiven Rodríguez; Isabel Hoyos; Daniel Mercado-Bettín; Germán Poveda
Biogeosciences Discussions | 2014
Jorge I. Zuluaga; Juan F. Salazar; Pablo A. Cuartas-Restrepo; Germán Poveda
revista avances en sistemas e informática | 2010
Elizabeth Mesa Múnera; Juan F. Salazar; John William Branch Bedoya
Journal of Hydrology | 2018
Estiven Rodríguez; Juan F. Salazar; Juan Camilo Villegas; Daniel Mercado-Bettín
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2018
Alejandro Salazar; Adriana Sanchez; Juan Camilo Villegas; Juan F. Salazar; Daniel Ruiz Carrascal; Stephen Sitch; Juan D. Restrepo; Germán Poveda; Kenneth J. Feeley; Lina M. Mercado; Paola A. Arias; Carlos A. Sierra; Maria del Rosario Uribe; Angela M. Rendón; Juan Carlos Pérez; Guillermo Murray Tortarolo; Daniel Mercado-Bettín; José A Posada; Qianlai Zhuang; Jeffrey S. Dukes
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions | 2017
Daniel Mercado-Bettín; Juan F. Salazar; Juan Camilo Villegas