Coherent eddies and turbulence in vegetation canopies: The mixing-layer analogy

被引:919
作者
Raupach, MR
Finnigan, JJ
Brunet, Y
机构
[1] Centre for Environmental Mechanics, CSIRO, GPO Box 821
关键词
D O I
10.1007/BF00120941
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
This paper argues that the active turbulence and coherent motions near the top of a vegetation canopy are patterned on a plane mixing layer, because of instabilities associated with the characteristic strong inflection in the mean velocity profile. Mixing-layer turbulence, formed around the inflectional mean velocity profile which develops between two coflowing streams of different velocities, differs in several ways from turbulence in a surface layer. Through these differences, the mixing-layer analogy provides an explanation for many of the observed distinctive features of canopy turbulence. These include: (a) ratios between components of the Reynolds stress tensor; (b) the ratio K-H/K-M of the eddy diffusivities for heat and momentum; (c) the relative roles of ejections and sweeps; (d) the behaviour of the turbulent energy balance, particularly the major role of turbulent transport; and (e) the behaviour of the turbulent length scales of the active coherent motions (the dominant eddies responsible for vertical transfer near the top of the canopy). It is predicted that these length scales are controlled by the shear length scale L(s)=U(h)/U'(h) (where h is canopy height, U(z) is mean velocity as a function of height z, and U'=dU/dz). In particular, the streamwise spacing of the dominant canopy eddies is Lambda(x)=mL(s), with m=8.1. These predictions are tested against many sets of field and wind-tunnel data. We propose a picture of canopy turbulence in which eddies associated with inflectional instabilities are modulated by larger-scale, inactive turbulence, which is quasi-horizontal on the scale of the canopy.
引用
收藏
页码:351 / 382
页数:32
相关论文
共 96 条
[81]  
2
[82]   INFLUENCE OF FOLIAR DENSITY AND THERMAL-STABILITY ON PROFILES OF REYNOLDS STRESS AND TURBULENCE INTENSITY IN A DECIDUOUS FOREST [J].
SHAW, RH ;
DENHARTOG, G ;
NEUMANN, HH .
BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 1988, 45 (04) :391-409
[83]   A wind tunnel study of air flow in waving wheat: Two-point velocity statistics [J].
Shaw, RH ;
Brunet, Y ;
Finnigan, JJ ;
Raupach, MR .
BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 1995, 76 (04) :349-376
[84]   MICROMETEOROLOGY OF TEMPERATE AND TROPICAL FOREST [J].
SHUTTLEWORTH, WJ .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1989, 324 (1223) :299-334
[85]  
Taylor R, 1958, AUSTRALIAN J PHYS, V11, P168, DOI DOI 10.1071/PH580168
[86]  
Townsend A., 1976, The Structure of Turbulent Shear Flow
[87]   ENTRAINMENT AND STRUCTURE OF TURBULENT FLOW [J].
TOWNSEND, AA .
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 1970, 41 :13-&
[88]   WALL REGION IN TURBULENT SHEAR-FLOW [J].
WALLACE, JM ;
BRODKEY, RS ;
ECKELMANN, H .
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 1972, 54 (JUL11) :39-+
[89]  
WILCZAK JM, 1984, J ATMOS SCI, V41, P3537, DOI 10.1175/1520-0469(1984)041<3537:LSEITU>2.0.CO
[90]  
2