The adjustment of profiles and eddy fluxes
β Scribed by A. J. Dyer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1963
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 279 KB
- Volume
- 89
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0035-9009
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
An assessment is made using simple diffusion theory of the rate of adjustment of profiles and eddy fluxes for (a), the leadingβedge case as a function of distance and (b), the horizontally uniform case as a function of time. The solutions of the appropriate diffusion equations obtained by Philip (1959) are used as the basis of the calculations. For the leadingβedge case the fetchβheight ratio for 90 per cent of the adjustment to be completed varies from 140 at a height of 0Β·5 metres to 530 at a height of 50 metres. The solution has application over a wide range of wind speed. For the case of horizontal uniformity and following an abrupt change in surface flux, 90 per cent of the adjustment is completed in 0Β·45 min at a height of 0Β·5 m increasing to 86 min at a height of 50 m.
It is suggested that these values indicate that the choice of site and conditions for micrometeorological research is critical, and that disparity between a number of experiments may be a consequence of failure to satisfy these basic requirements.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The turbulent fluxes of momentum and heat were determined by the eddy correlation and profile techniques for over water, fetch limited, near neutral conditions. The estimates agree well within the experimental error. The ΓΈ~11~ technique estimates of stress are systematically higher.
## Abstract An investigation of a large number of upperβair soundings over regions of North America shows that the eddy transport of sensible heat is poleward in the midβlatitude troposphere, reversing and becoming equatorward in the stratosphere. The eddy transport of sensible heat reaches its max