Abstract

Abstract Three different instrument systems are compared in their ability to either directly or indirectly measure humidity, temperature, and refractive-index fluctuations. Each system consists of a basic instrument—a Lyman-α hygrometer, an infrared absorption hygrometer or a radio refractometer—configured with its own fine-wire resistance thermometer. All measurements were obtained at a height of 5.2 m in the atmospheric surface layer. We present time series from these instruments, power spectra of humidity, temperature, and radio refractive index, as well as temperature-humidity cospectra, phase spectra, and coherence spectra. The temperature and humidity are either very well correlated or anticorrelated. The temperature-humidity cospectra have the inertial subrange power law up to wavenumbers where instrumental effects interfere. The refractive-index structure parameters calculated from the humidity and temperature fluctuations measured by the Lyman-α and its fine wire agree substantially with the stru...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call