6533b858fe1ef96bd12b5b60
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Modeling Atmospheric Turbulence via Rapid Distortion Theory: Spectral Tensor of Velocity and Buoyancy
Gunner Chr. LarsenMark C. KellyAbhijit ChouguleJakob Mannsubject
Length scaleAtmospheric Science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesK-epsilon turbulence modelFLOWVelocityTensorsWind01 natural sciencesWind speedAtmospheric temperature010305 fluids & plasmasPhysics::Fluid DynamicsEnergy-containing eddiesConvergence of numerical methodsMonin-Obukhov similarity theorySCALEPhysicsTurbulenceAtmospheric turbulenceMechanicsBuoyancySURFACE-LAYER TURBULENCEClassical mechanicsFluxesStratified turbulenceSIMILARITYSIMULATIONBoundary layersStabilityBuoyancyMETEOROLOGYengineering.materialPROFILEAtmospheric thermodynamics0103 physical sciencesAtmospheric instabilityWind shearsSTABLY STRATIFIED TURBULENCETensorRapid distortion theory0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWind shearBoundary layer flowRichardson numberAtmospheric observationsViscous dissipation rateHorizontal array turbulence study field programsTurbulenceBoundary layerengineeringdescription
Abstract A spectral tensor model is presented for turbulent fluctuations of wind velocity components and temperature, assuming uniform vertical gradients in mean temperature and mean wind speed. The model is built upon rapid distortion theory (RDT) following studies by Mann and by Hanazaki and Hunt, using the eddy lifetime parameterization of Mann to make the model stationary. The buoyant spectral tensor model is driven via five parameters: the viscous dissipation rate ε, length scale of energy-containing eddies L, a turbulence anisotropy parameter , gradient Richardson number (Ri) representing the local atmospheric stability, and the rate of destruction of temperature variance . Model output includes velocity and temperature spectra and associated cospectra, including those of longitudinal and vertical temperature fluxes. The model also produces two-point statistics, such as coherences and phases of velocity components and temperature. The statistics of uniformly sheared and stratified turbulence from the model are compared with atmospheric observations taken from the Horizontal Array Turbulence Study (HATS) field program, and model results fit observed one-dimensional spectra quite well. For highly unstable stratification, however, the model has deficiencies at low wavenumbers that limit its prediction of longitudinal velocity component spectra at scales on the order of 0.6 km. The model predicts coherences well for horizontal separations but overestimates vertical coherence with increasing separation. Finally, it is shown that the RDT output can deviate from Monin–Obukhov similarity theory.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2017-03-14 | Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences |