4.4 Article

Multiscale Shear Forcing of Turbulence in the Nocturnal Boundary Layer: A Statistical Analysis

Journal

BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY
Volume 179, Issue 1, Pages 43-72

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10546-020-00583-0

Keywords

Clustering analysis; Intermittent turbulence; Nocturnal boundary layer; Non-stationary autoregressive models; Sub-mesoscale motions

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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This study investigates intermittent turbulence in the lower nocturnal boundary layer, analyzing the relationship between the vertical gradients of sub-mean scales and turbulence kinetic energy. The results show that intermittent turbulence occurs when the intensity of sub-mesoscale motions exceeds 10% of the mean kinetic energy in strong stratification.
The lower nocturnal boundary layer is governed by intermittent turbulence which is thought to be triggered by sporadic activity of so-called sub-mesoscale motions in a complex way. We analyze intermittent turbulence based on an assumed relation between the vertical gradients of the sub-mean scales and turbulence kinetic energy. We analyze high-resolution nocturnal eddy-correlation data from 30-m tower collected during the Fluxes over Snow Surfaces II field program. The non-turbulent velocity signal is decomposed using a discrete wavelet transform into three ranges of scales interpreted as the mean, jet and sub-mesoscales. The vertical gradients of the sub-mean scales are estimated using finite differences. The turbulence kinetic energy is modelled as a discrete-time autoregressive process with exogenous variables, where the latter ones are the vertical gradients of the sub-mean scales. The parameters of the discrete model evolve in time depending on the locally-dominant turbulence-production scales. The three regimes with averaged model parameters are estimated using a subspace-clustering algorithm which illustrates a weak bimodal distribution in the energy phase space of turbulence and sub-mesoscale motions for the very stable boundary layer. One mode indicates turbulence modulated by sub-mesoscale motions. Furthermore, intermittent turbulence appears if the sub-mesoscale intensity exceeds 10% of the mean kinetic energy in strong stratification.

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