atmospheric boundary layers
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhishek Paraswarar Harikrishnan ◽  
Natalia Ernst ◽  
Cedrick Ansorge ◽  
Rupert Klein ◽  
Nikki Vercauteren

2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (10) ◽  
pp. 105111
Author(s):  
Henrik Asmuth ◽  
Christian F. Janßen ◽  
Hugo Olivares-Espinosa ◽  
Stefan Ivanell

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (17) ◽  
pp. 5399
Author(s):  
Mikhail A. Sheremet

Heat transfer including heat conduction, thermal convection, and thermal radiation is a major transport process that occurs in various engineering and natural systems such as heat exchangers, solar collectors, nuclear reactors, atmospheric boundary layers, electronical and biomedical systems, and others. [...]


2021 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 144-145
Author(s):  
Carol Anne Clayson ◽  
Luca Centurioni ◽  
Meghan F. Cronin ◽  
James Edson ◽  
Sarah Gille ◽  
...  

Abstract Air‐sea interactions are critical to large-scale weather and climate predictions because of the ocean's ability to absorb excess atmospheric heat and carbon and regulate exchanges of momentum, water vapor, and other greenhouse gases. These exchanges are controlled by molecular, turbulent, and wave-driven processes in the atmospheric and oceanic boundary layers. Improved understanding and representation of these processes in models are key for increasing Earth system prediction skill, particularly for subseasonal to decadal time scales. Our understanding and ability to model these processes within this coupled system is presently inadequate due in large part to a lack of data: contemporaneous long-term observations from the top of the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) to the base of the oceanic mixing layer.We propose the concept of “Super Sites” to provide multi-year suites of measurements at specific locations to simultaneously characterize physical and biogeochemical processes within the coupled boundary layers at high spatial and temporal resolution. Measurements will be made from floating platforms, buoys, towers, and autonomous vehicles, utilizing both in-situ and remote sensors. The engineering challenges and level of coordination, integration, and interoperability required to develop these coupled ocean‐atmosphere Super Sites place them in an “Ocean Shot” class.


Author(s):  
Philip E. Hancock ◽  
Paul Hayden

AbstractTwo cases of an overlying inversion imposed on a stable boundary layer are investigated, extending the work of Hancock and Hayden (Boundary-Layer Meteorol 168:29–57, 2018; 175:93–112, 2020). Vertical profiles of Reynolds stresses and heat flux show closely horizontally homogeneous behaviour over a streamwise fetch of more than eight boundary-layer heights. However, profiles of mean temperature and velocity show closely horizontally homogeneous behaviour only in the top two-thirds of the boundary layer. In the lower one-third the temperature decreases with fetch, directly as a consequence of heat transfer to the surface. A weaker effect is seen in the mean velocity profiles, curiously, such that the gradient Richardson number is invariant with fetch, while various other quantities are not. Stability leads to a ‘blocking’ of vertical influence. Inferred aerodynamic and thermal roughness lengths increase with fetch, while the former is constant in the neutral case, as expected. Favourable validation comparisons are made against two sets of local-scaling systems over the full depth of the boundary layer. Close concurrence is seen for all stable cases for z/L < 0.2, where z and L are the vertical height and local Obukhov length, respectively, and over most of the layer for some quantities.


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