Abstract

Abstract. A simple model for turbulence kinetic energy (TKE) and the TKE budget is presented for sheared convective atmospheric conditions based on observations from the Boundary Layer Late Afternoon and Sunset Turbulence (BLLAST) field campaign. It is based on an idealized mixed-layer approximation and a simplified near-surface TKE budget. In this model, the TKE is dependent on four budget terms (turbulent dissipation rate, buoyancy production, shear production and vertical transport of TKE) and only requires measurements of three available inputs (near-surface buoyancy flux, boundary layer depth and wind speed at one height in the surface layer) to predict vertical profiles of TKE and TKE budget terms.This simple model is shown to reproduce some of the observed variations between the different studied days in terms of near-surface TKE and its decay during the afternoon transition reasonably well. It is subsequently used to systematically study the effects of buoyancy and shear on TKE evolution using idealized constant and time-varying winds during the afternoon transition. From this, we conclude that many different TKE decay rates are possible under time-varying winds and that generalizing the decay with simple scaling laws for near-surface TKE of the form tα may be questionable.The model's errors result from the exclusion of processes such as elevated shear production and horizontal advection. The model also produces an overly rapid decay of shear production with height. However, the most influential budget terms governing near-surface TKE in the observed sheared convective boundary layers are included, while only second-order factors are neglected. Comparison between modeled and averaged observed estimates of dissipation rate illustrates that the overall behavior of the model is often quite reasonable. Therefore, we use the model to discuss the low-turbulence conditions that form first in the upper parts of the boundary layer during the afternoon transition and are only apparent later near the surface. This occurs as a consequence of the continuous decrease in near-surface buoyancy flux during the afternoon transition. This region of weak afternoon turbulence is hypothesized to be a “pre-residual layer”, which is important in determining the onset conditions for the weak sporadic turbulence that occur in the residual layer once near-surface stratification has become stable.

Highlights

  • The daytime atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) is characterized by unstable stratification, turbulent mixing of momentum, heat, scalars and buoyancy-driven eddies

  • 2 m results from our idealized modeling will be discussed since the model compares well with measurements of turbulence kinetic energy (TKE) at 2.23 m in the previous section and less well at other heights

  • This study presents a simple one-dimensional model to investigate atmospheric turbulence kinetic energy in sheared convective boundary layers

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Summary

Introduction

The daytime atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) is characterized by unstable stratification, turbulent mixing of momentum, heat, scalars and buoyancy-driven eddies. We present a simple one-dimensional TKE budget model based on the analysis presented in Part 1 and assumptions about approximate height dependencies of TKE budget terms in the mixed layer We use this model to carry out simulations for nine IOP days where near-surface measurements and TKE budget estimates for both morning and afternoon periods were available. In this way, we can compare our simulated TKE at different heights to observations and discuss directly how the estimated budget terms act in the model to underestimate or overestimate TKE at specific times.

Model main goal and description
The governing TKE equation
Height dependence of the shear production term
Height dependence of transport of TKE
Height dependence of the dissipation term
Specification of initial neutral morning conditions
Height and time dependence of TKE
Description of data sets
Description of data time series treatment
Treatment of dissipation rate from UHF wind profiler
Evaluation of near-surface TKE and budget terms: nine IOP days
Evaluation of near-surface TKE budget terms
Evaluation of near-surface TKE
Parameter exploration for near-surface TKE
Setup of different scenarios
Results from varying the afternoon length
Results from varying the boundary layer depth
Results from varying the sensible heat flux
Results from varying the wind speed
Comment upon turbulence decay laws
A simple equilibrium model
Discussion and conclusions
Full Text
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