Kg. Mcnaughton et J. Laubach, Power spectra and cospectra for wind and scalars in a disturbed surface layer at the base of an advective inversion, BOUND-LAY M, 96(1-2), 2000, pp. 143-185
This paper reports power spectra and cospectra of wind speed and several sc
alars measured at two heights near the base of an advective inversion. The
inversion had formed over a paddy field downwind of an extensive dry region
. Winds over the paddy field were variable in strength and direction, as a
result of convective motions in the atmospheric boundary layer passing over
from the dry region upwind. Fetch over the rice was large enough that adve
ctive effects on the transport processes were small at the upper level and
negligible at the lower level. Results from the lower level are interpreted
in terms of a horizontally homogeneous, but disturbed, surface layer.
Power spectra of longitudinal and lateral velocity were substantially enhan
ced at low frequencies. The resulting vertical motions added only a small a
mount to the spectrum of vertical velocity but this strongly affected scala
r power spectra and cospectra. These were all substantially enhanced over a
range of low frequencies. We also found that differences in lower boundary
conditions cause differences among scalar spectra at low frequencies.
Our analysis shows that the spectra and cospectra have three components, ch
aracterized by different scaling regimes. We call these the ILS (inner-laye
r scaling), OLS (outer-layer scaling) and CS (combined scaling) components.
Of these, the CS component had not previously been identified. We identify
CS components of spectra by their independence of height and frequency. Sp
ectra with these characteristics had been predicted by Kader and Yaglom for
a layer of the atmosphere where spectral matching between ILS and OLS was
proposed. However, we find that the velocity and scalar scales used by Kade
r and Yaglom do not fit our results and that their concept of a matching la
yer is incompatible with our application. An alternative basis for this beh
aviour and alternative scales are proposed.
We compare our decomposition of spectra into ILS, CS and OLS components wit
h an extended form of Townsend's hypothesis, in which wind and scalar fluct
uations are divided into `active' and `inactive' components. We find the sc
hemes are compatible if we identify all OLS spectral components as inactive
, and all CS and ILS components as active.
By extending the implications of our results to ordinary unstable daytime c
onditions, we predict that classical Monin-Obukhov similarity theory should
be modified. We find that the height of the convective boundary layer is a
n important parameter when describing transport processes near the ground,
and that the scalar scale in the ILS part of the spectrum, which includes t
he inertial subrange, is proportional to observation height times the local
mean scalar gradient, and not the Monin-Obukhov scalar scale parameter. Th
e former depends on two stability parameters: the Monin-Obukhov stability p
arameter and the ratio of the inner-layer and outer-layer velocity scales.
The outer-layer scale can reflect disturbances by topographically-induced e
ddying as well as by convective motions.