The vertical velocity field and the convective plumes in the atmospheric boundary layer have been observed during morning hours with the acoustic Doppler sounder of the C.R.P.E. A method for plume determination using acoustic soundings in the well-mixed layer is presented. Using Telford's 1970 and M
Convective characteristics of the nocturnal urban boundary layer as observed with Doppler sodar and Raman lidar
✍ Scribed by S. Casadio; A. Sarra; G. Fiocco; D. Fuà; F. Lena; M. P. Rao
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 971 KB
- Volume
- 79
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-8314
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✦ Synopsis
Convective plume patterns, characteristic of clear sky and light wind daytime boundary layers over land, were observed for two nights with a &i-axial Doppler sodar operated in the central area of Rome during the summer of 1994. An urban heat island effect, combined with a continuation of a breeze from the sea late into night during both days, is believed to be responsible for the observed nocturnal convection. Estimates of the surface heat flux and the vertical velocity scaling parameter are obtained from profiles of vertical velocity variance, and the Raman lidar water vapor measurements are used to obtain the humidity scaling parameter. Convective scaling results for vertical wind and humidity fairly agree with the results of other experiments and models. On the basis of available measurements, it appears that mixed-layer similarity formulations used to characterize the daytime convective boundary layer over horizontally homogeneous surfaces can also be applied to the nocturnal urban boundary layer during periods of reasonable convective activity.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The morning development of the daytime convective boundary layer (CBL) during fine weather has been observed with an acoustic D2pler sodar of the C.R.P.E. In particular, the vertical profile of the vertical velocity third-order statistic W" has been obtained. This quantity is a maximum near 0.32, wh
Results on the structure of the convective atmospheric boundary layer based on the analyses of data from the instrumented NSSL-KTVY tower, airborne Doppler lidar, and ground-based Doppler radars are presented. The vertically averaged wind over the boundary layer was found to be insensitive to barocl