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Estimating aerodynamic resistance of rough surfaces using angular reflectance

โœ Scribed by Adrian Chappell; Scott Van Pelt; Ted Zobeck; Zhibao Dong


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
763 KB
Volume
114
Category
Article
ISSN
0034-4257

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โœฆ Synopsis


Current wind erosion and dust emission models neglect the heterogeneous nature of surface roughness and its geometric anisotropic effect on aerodynamic resistance, and over-estimate the erodible area by assuming it is not covered by roughness elements. We address these shortfalls with a new model which estimates aerodynamic roughness length (z 0 ) using angular reflectance of a rough surface. The new model is proportional to the frontal area index, directional, and represents the geometric anisotropy of z 0 . The model explained most of the variation in two sets of wind tunnel measurements of aerodynamic roughness lengths (z 0 ). Field estimates of z 0 for varying wind directions were similar to predictions made by the new model. The model was used to estimate the erodible area exposed to abrasion by saltating particles. Vertically integrated horizontal flux (F h ) was calculated using the area not covered by non-erodible hemispheres; the approach embodied in dust emission models. Under the same model conditions, F h estimated using the new model was up to 85% smaller than that using the conventional area not covered. These F h simulations imply that wind erosion and dust emission models without geometric anisotropic sheltering of the surface, may considerably over-estimate F h and hence the amount of dust emission. The new model provides a straightforward method to estimate aerodynamic resistance with the potential to improve the accuracy of wind erosion and dust emission models, a measure that can be retrieved using bi-directional reflectance models from angular satellite sensors, and an alternative to notoriously unreliable field estimates of z 0 and their extrapolations across landform scales.


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