Observations from the German Front Experiment are presented here that
show the existence-in conditions with a dominant flow component parall
el to the main Alpine chain-of a mesoscale region to the north of the
Alps where the absolute and potential vorticity (PV) are substantially
negative. These structures exist before the front arrives to the Alps
and appear to be affected little by the passage of the front. A dynam
ical explanation for these and other mesoscale structures is sought by
considering a simple unsheared airflow impinging on the Alps from the
west. A linear frictionless model for the steady-state response is us
ed as well as a full nonlinear numerical model with and without fricti
on. A vastly simplified Alpine orography is considered as well as one
that adequately describes its mesoscale detail. The results show that
the frictionless linear dynamics lead to a zone north of the Alps with
anticyclonic vorticity but with uniform (positive) potential vorticit
y. With boundary-layer processes included in a nonlinear simulation su
bstantial PV anomalies are produced. This leads to negative PV, and ab
solute vorticity, north of the Alps and positive PV south of the Alps.
The region of PV anomalies in the model bears a suggestive similarity
to that in the observations. The PV structures are attributed to fric
tional processes acting in a boundary layer that acquires a slope due
to the sloping mountain sides. This mechanism only operates in this si
tuation. Other mesoscale aspects of the flow are discussed in regions
around the Alps for which we have as yet no detailed observational evi
dence; for example, there is strong flow retardation immediately downs
tream of the orography. An important conclusion is that the Alps, in c
onditions of parallel flow, are a significant source of potential vort
icity anomalies in the lower troposphere. These are advected away from
the orography and must be an important part of the tropospheric PV bu
dget.