Publication | Open Access
Stably Stratified Atmospheric Boundary Layers
472
Citations
137
References
2013
Year
Upper AtmosphereAeroacousticsEngineeringFluid StratificationFluid MechanicsTurbulenceGeophysical FlowBoundary LayerEarth ScienceGeophysicsAtmospheric ScienceNumerical SimulationHydrodynamic StabilityLower AtmosphereMeteorologySimilarity TheoryNonturbulent MotionsWeak StratificationTurbulence ModelingAerodynamics
Stable atmospheric boundary layers with strong stratification exhibit complex, intermittent turbulence that often deviates from similarity theory and lacks an inertial subrange, challenging conventional modeling. New observational and analysis techniques are expected to advance our understanding of the very stable boundary layer.
Atmospheric boundary layers with weak stratification are relatively well described by similarity theory and numerical models for stationary horizontally homogeneous conditions. With common strong stratification, similarity theory becomes unreliable. The turbulence structure and interactions with the mean flow and small-scale nonturbulent motions assume a variety of scenarios. The turbulence is intermittent and may no longer fully satisfy the usual conditions for the definition of turbulence. Nonturbulent motions include wave-like motions and solitary modes, two-dimensional vortical modes, microfronts, intermittent drainage flows, and a host of more complex structures. The main source of turbulence may not be at the surface, but rather may result from shear above the surface inversion. The turbulence is typically not in equilibrium with the nonturbulent motions, sometimes preventing the formation of an inertial subrange. New observational and analysis techniques are expected to advance our understanding of the very stable boundary layer.
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