4.4 Article

The Influence of Aircraft Speed Variations on Sensible Heat-Flux Measurements by Different Airborne Systems

期刊

BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY
卷 150, 期 1, 页码 153-166

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10546-013-9853-7

关键词

Airborne measurements; Eddy-covariance; Sensible heat-flux; Spatial and temporal averaging

资金

  1. Niedersachsische Ministerium fur Wissenschaft und Kultur

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Crawford et al. (Boundary-Layer Meteorol 66:237-245, 1993) showed that the time average is inappropriate for airborne eddy-covariance flux calculations. The aircraft's ground speed through a turbulent field is not constant. One reason can be a correlation with vertical air motion, so that some types of structures are sampled more densely than others. To avoid this, the time-sampled data are adjusted for the varying ground speed so that the modified estimates are equivalent to spatially-sampled data. A comparison of sensible heat-flux calculations using temporal and spatial averaging methods is presented and discussed. Data of the airborne measurement systems , Helipod and Dornier 128-6 are used for the analysis. These systems vary in size, weight and aerodynamic characteristics, since the is a small unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), the Helipod a helicopter-borne turbulence probe and the Dornier 128-6 a manned research aircraft. The systematic bias anticipated in covariance computations due to speed variations was neither found when averaging over Dornier, Helipod nor UAV flight legs. However, the random differences between spatial and temporal averaging fluxes were found to be up to 30 % on the individual flight legs.

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