+ All Categories

1-1

Date post: 06-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: fancy
View: 29 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
1-1. 1-2. PBLs, TURBULENCE AND TROPICAL CYCLONES. Courtesy NOAA. 1-3. C D Donelan etal, 2004. Maximum azimuthal wind speed (Emanuel, 2004). 1-4. PBLs, TURBULENCE AND CLIMATE. Stratocumulus cloud deck off the California coast Courtesy Bjorn Stevens (UCLA) from DYCOMS II. 1-5. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
34
1-1
Transcript
Page 1: 1-1

1-1

Page 2: 1-1

1-2

Page 3: 1-1

PBLs, TURBULENCE AND TROPICAL CYCLONES

Courtesy NOAA

1-3

Page 4: 1-1

CD Donelan etal, 2004

Maximum azimuthal wind speed (Emanuel, 2004)

1-4

Page 5: 1-1

PBLs, TURBULENCE AND CLIMATE

Stratocumulus cloud deck off the California coast Courtesy Bjorn Stevens (UCLA) from DYCOMS II 1-5

Page 6: 1-1

ENTRAINMENT AND STRATOCUMULUS

DILUTION OF STRATUS BY ENTRAINMENT OF DRY WARM AIR ABOVE THE CLOUD DECK IS DETERMINED BY COMPLEX COUPLINGS OF TURBULENCE, RADIATION, AND CLOUD MICROPHYSICS. LARGE ENTRAINMENT RATES THIN THE CLOUD DECK WHICH RADICALLY ALTER THE RADIATIVE FORCING AT THE WATER SURFACE. THESE CHANGES IN SOLAR HEATING EXCEED EFFECTS ASSOCIATED WITH RELEASE OF GREENHOUSE GASES. STRATUS ACCOUNT FOR 1/3 OF THE CLOUDS OVER THE OCEAN.

Z

warm

cool

1-6

Page 7: 1-1

Before Bonnie

After Bonnie... .

.....

SST Variations, Ocean Mixing and Biology

Shuyi Chen, RSMAS

1-7

Page 8: 1-1

Urban smog from the Washington, D.C.-Baltimore metropolitan area contained by the summit ridgeline of South Mountain on the western side of the Shenandoah Valley. (Photo:J.Van Gundy)

PBLs, TURBULENCE AND DISPERSION

1-8

Page 9: 1-1

PBLs, TURBULENCE AND WIND POWER

Power generation from large wind turbines is a growing industry. Machines are often located in heterogeneous locations that induce complex surface layer turbulence. The machines shown in these photographs are sited off the Australian coast to take advantage of persistent sea breezes. They are frequently buffeted by separated turbulent flow that develops over the sea cliff which impacts their performance.

Courtesy Keith Ayotte, Wind Lab Systems, Australia 1-9

Page 10: 1-1

BULK STRUCTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERIC PBL

`` We define the boundary layer as that part of the troposphere that is directly influenced by the presence of the Earth’s surface, and responds to surface forcings with a timescale of about an hour or less …” [Stull(1998)]

1-10

Page 11: 1-1

1-11

Page 12: 1-1

LIDAR OBSERVATIONS OF PBL DIURNAL EVOLUTION

Local Time

Courtesy Shane Mayor NCAR 1-12

Page 13: 1-1

Local Time 1-13

Page 14: 1-1

“VIRTUAL” TURBULENCE

EVIDENCE FROM NUMERICAL EXPERIMENTS

1-14

Page 15: 1-1

1-15

Page 16: 1-1

X

ZY

1-16

Page 17: 1-1

X

ZY

hot

cool

1-17

Page 18: 1-1

XY

EVOLUTION OF ENSTROPHY IN AN X-Y PLANE

steady periodic quasi-periodic turbulent

1-18

Page 19: 1-1

1-19

Page 20: 1-1

T (min)

Average of the turbulent flow in time

1-20

Page 21: 1-1

0

1-21

Page 22: 1-1

0 0

1-22

Page 23: 1-1

0

1-23

Page 24: 1-1

1-24

Page 25: 1-1

Hot summer day Stratus Day after rainfall Pollutant advection

1-25

Page 26: 1-1

1-26

Page 27: 1-1

1-27

Page 28: 1-1

MEAN AND TURBULENT FLUX PROFILES FOR PBLS WITH VARYING STRATIFICATION

LES RESULTS MOENG & SULLIVAN (1994)1-28

Page 29: 1-1

00

Idealized wind and turbulent flux profiles

Surface layer

1-29

Page 30: 1-1

(x,y) usually aligned with the mean wind

1-30

Page 31: 1-1

Neutral

0

Unstable Stable

1-31

Page 32: 1-1

You are a fluid dynamicist visiting the Louvre in Paris and are asked by the curator to comment on the above paintings. What do you say?

1-32

Page 33: 1-1
Page 34: 1-1

Recommended