Publication | Closed Access
Revisiting the Definition of the Drag Coefficient in the Marine Atmospheric Boundary Layer
105
Citations
41
References
2010
Year
MeteorologyEnvironmental Fluid DynamicMarine MeteorologyEngineeringPhysical OceanographyOcean EngineeringAtmospheric ScienceNeutral Drag CoefficientDrag CoefficientAerodynamicsOceanographyMarine EngineeringWind SpeedNew DefinitionWind EngineeringBoundary LayerEarth ScienceSediment Transport
Abstract A new functional form of the neutral drag coefficient for moderate to high wind speeds in the marine atmospheric boundary layer for a range of field measurements as reported in the literature is proposed. This new form is found to describe a wide variety of measurements recorded in the open ocean, coast, fetch-limited seas, and lakes, with almost one and the same set of parameters. This is the result of a reanalysis of the definition of the drag coefficient in the marine boundary layer, which finds that a constant is missing from the traditional definition of the drag coefficient. The constant arises because the neutral friction velocity over water surfaces is not directly proportional to the 10-m wind speed, a consequence of the transition to rough flow at low wind speeds. Within the rough flow regime, the neutral friction velocity is linearly dependent on the 10-m wind speed; consequently, within this rough regime, the new definition of the drag coefficient is not a function of the wind speed. The magnitude of the new definition of the neutral drag coefficient represents an upper limit to the magnitude of the traditional definition.
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