An analysis of intermittency, scaling, and surface renewal in atmospheric surface layer turbulence
Turbulent velocity and scalar concentration time series were collected in the atmosphere above an ice sheet, a mesic grassland, and a temperate pine forest, thereby encompassing a wide range of roughness conditions encountered in nature. Intermittency and scaling properties of such series were then analyzed using Tsallis's non-extensive thermostatistics. While theoretical links between the Tsallis's non-extensive thermostatistics and Navier-Stokes turbulence remain questionable, the Tsallis distribution (a special interpretation of Student's t-distribution) provides a unifying framework to investigate two inter-connected problems: similarity between scalars and velocity statistics within the inertial subrange and "contamination" of internal intermittency by "external" factors. In particular, we show that "internal" intermittency models, including the She-Leveque, Lognormal, and Log-stable, reproduce the observed Tsallis parameters well for velocities within the inertial subrange, despite the differences in surface roughness conditions, but fail to describe the fluctuations for the scalars (e.g., air temperature CO
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- Fluids & Plasmas
- 4903 Numerical and computational mathematics
- 4902 Mathematical physics
- 4901 Applied mathematics
- 0102 Applied Mathematics
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Fluids & Plasmas
- 4903 Numerical and computational mathematics
- 4902 Mathematical physics
- 4901 Applied mathematics
- 0102 Applied Mathematics