The effect of wind speed and bed slope on sand transport
β Scribed by James D. Iversen; Keld R. Rasmussen
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 448 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1469-3496
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β¦ Synopsis
This paper reports on a wind tunnel study of the effects of bed slope and wind speed on aeolian mass transport. The use of a sloping wind tunnel has enabled estimation of the friction angle Ξ± to be about 40Β° for saltating particles in the range 170β540βΞΌm. A formula relating dimensionless mass transport to friction speed and bed slope is proposed, and mass transport data for five uniform sand samples and one nonβuniform sand sample are shown to fit the equation well. In particular, the relationship reveals an overshoot in mass transport slightly above threshold collisions, a feature also evident when previous experimental data is reβexamined. As the number of midβair collisions between the saltating particles increases greatly with wind speed, the overshoot may occur as a result of increasing energy losses resulting from the collisions. Finally, it is demonstrated that data for saltating snow shows a similar overshoot in the dimensionless transport rate.
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This paper deals with the effect of rainfall on the process of wind erosion of beach sands and presents results from both field and wind tunnel experiments. Although sediment transport by splash is of secondary importance on coastal dunes, splashsaltation processes can move sediments in conditions w
## Abstract The present study was carried out to investigate the effects of wind and bed slope on uniformity of water and soil moisture distribution in solidβset sprinkler systems. For that, six plots of 25βΓβ30βm with bed slopes varying from 1.3 to 13.4% were selected in the BilehβSavar Sprinkler