Abstract

Abstract. In atmospheric tracer experiments, a substance is released into the turbulent atmospheric flow to study the dispersion parameters of the atmosphere. That can be done by observing the substance's concentration distribution downwind of the source. Past experiments have suffered from the fact that observations were only made at a few discrete locations and/or at low time resolution. The Comtessa project (Camera Observation and Modelling of 4-D Tracer Dispersion in the Atmosphere) is the first attempt at using ultraviolet (UV) camera observations to sample the three-dimensional (3-D) concentration distribution in the atmospheric boundary layer at high spatial and temporal resolution. For this, during a three-week campaign in Norway in July 2017, sulfur dioxide (SO2), a nearly passive tracer, was artificially released in continuous plumes and nearly instantaneous puffs from a 9 m high tower. Column-integrated SO2 concentrations were observed with six UV SO2 cameras with sampling rates of several hertz and a spatial resolution of a few centimetres. The atmospheric flow was characterised by eddy covariance measurements of heat and momentum fluxes at the release mast and two additional towers. By measuring simultaneously with six UV cameras positioned in a half circle around the release point, we could collect a data set of spatially and temporally resolved tracer column densities from six different directions, allowing a tomographic reconstruction of the 3-D concentration field. However, due to unfavourable cloudy conditions on all measurement days and their restrictive effect on the SO2 camera technique, the presented data set is limited to case studies. In this paper, we present a feasibility study demonstrating that the turbulent dispersion parameters can be retrieved from images of artificially released puffs, although the presented data set does not allow for an in-depth analysis of the obtained parameters. The 3-D trajectories of the centre of mass of the puffs were reconstructed enabling both a direct determination of the centre of mass meandering and a scaling of the image pixel dimension to the position of the puff. The latter made it possible to retrieve the temporal evolution of the puff spread projected to the image plane. The puff spread is a direct measure of the relative dispersion process. Combining meandering and relative dispersion, the absolute dispersion could be retrieved. The turbulent dispersion in the vertical is then used to estimate the effective source size, source timescale and the Lagrangian integral time. In principle, the Richardson–Obukhov constant of relative dispersion in the inertial subrange could be also obtained, but the observation time was not sufficiently long in comparison to the source timescale to allow an observation of this dispersion range. While the feasibility of the methodology to measure turbulent dispersion could be demonstrated, a larger data set with a larger number of cloud-free puff releases and longer observation times of each puff will be recorded in future studies to give a solid estimate for the turbulent dispersion under a variety of stability conditions.

Highlights

  • A substance (a “passive scalar”) injected into a turbulent atmospheric flow exhibits complex dynamical behaviour

  • SO2 column-integrated concentrations (CIC) images recorded simultaneously with six UV SO2 cameras are the basis for the retrieval of puff spreads

  • During the first Comtessa experiment, the passive tracer SO2 was released in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) to study its dispersion based on images from six UV SO2 cameras

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Summary

Introduction

A substance (a “passive scalar”) injected into a turbulent atmospheric flow exhibits complex dynamical behaviour. As described in Hanna (2010), the Prairie Grass experiment (Barad, 1958), where near source (< 1 km) dispersion of SO2 was measured under many stability conditions was perhaps the one most useful for dispersion model validation. One possibility to indirectly measure 3-D tracer concentrations at high time and space resolution ( able to capturing concentration fluctuations) are ultraviolet (UV) cameras. These cameras can measure sulfur dioxide (SO2) column concentrations with a sampling frequency of several hertz (Kern et al, 2010; Lübcke et al, 2013). 2) and how a tomographic setup of UV cameras can be used to quantify the dispersion of artificially released SO2 puffs in the ABL The data set does not contain a sufficiently large number of puffs for a reliable statistical analysis; the feasibility of the method is demonstrated

Artificial release experiment
Description of turbulent dispersion
Turbulent dispersion from image data
SO2 camera imaging technique
Detection of individual puffs in image plane
Results
Total SO2 mass
Puff spread
Turbulent dispersion in the vertical
Meandering
Relative dispersion
Absolute dispersion
Conclusions and future work
Camera temporal synchronisation
Data processing of the eddy covariance measurements
Comtessa SO2 slant column density retrieval
Algorithm description: tracking of individual puffs in image plane
Sensitivity of trajectory retrieval to single camera
Full Text
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