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Planetary boundary layer

In meteorology, the planetary boundary layer (PBL), also known as the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) or peplosphere, is the lowest part of the atmosphere and its behaviour is directly influenced by its contact with a planetary surface.[1] On Earth it usually responds to changes in surface radiative forcing in an hour or less. In this layer physical quantities such as flow velocity, temperature, and moisture display rapid fluctuations (turbulence) and vertical mixing is strong. Above the PBL is the "free atmosphere",[2] where the wind is approximately geostrophic (parallel to the isobars),[3] while within the PBL the wind is affected by surface drag and turns across the isobars (see Ekman layer for more detail).

This movie is a combined visualization of the PBL and wind dynamics over the Los Angeles basin for a one-month period. Vertical motion of the PBL is represented by the gray "blanket". The height of the PBL is largely driven by convection associated with the changing surface temperature of the Earth (for example, rising during the day and sinking at night). The colored arrows represent the strength and direction of winds at different altitudes.
Depiction of where the planetary boundary layer lies on a sunny day.

Cause of surface wind gradient edit

 
The difference in the amount of aerosols below and above the boundary layer is easy to see in this aerial photograph. Light pollution from the city of Berlin is strongly scattered below the layer, but above the layer it mostly propagates out into space.

Typically, due to aerodynamic drag, there is a wind gradient in the wind flow ~100 meters above the Earth's surface—the surface layer of the planetary boundary layer. Wind speed increases with increasing height above the ground, starting from zero[4] due to the no-slip condition.[5] Flow near the surface encounters obstacles that reduce the wind speed, and introduce random vertical and horizontal velocity components at right angles to the main direction of flow.[6] This turbulence causes vertical mixing between the air moving horizontally at one level and the air at those levels immediately above and below it, which is important in dispersion of pollutants[7] and in soil erosion.[8]

The reduction in velocity near the surface is a function of surface roughness, so wind velocity profiles are quite different for different terrain types.[5] Rough, irregular ground, and man-made obstructions on the ground can reduce the geostrophic wind speed by 40% to 50%.[9][10] Over open water or ice, the reduction may be only 20% to 30%.[11][12] These effects are taken into account when siting wind turbines.[13][14]

For engineering purposes, the wind gradient is modeled as a simple shear exhibiting a vertical velocity profile varying according to a power law with a constant exponential coefficient based on surface type. The height above ground where surface friction has a negligible effect on wind speed is called the "gradient height" and the wind speed above this height is assumed to be a constant called the "gradient wind speed".[10][15][16] For example, typical values for the predicted gradient height are 457 m for large cities, 366 m for suburbs, 274 m for open terrain, and 213 m for open sea.[17]

Although the power law exponent approximation is convenient, it has no theoretical basis.[18] When the temperature profile is adiabatic, the wind speed should vary logarithmically with height.[19] Measurements over open terrain in 1961 showed good agreement with the logarithmic fit up to 100 m or so (within the surface layer), with near constant average wind speed up through 1000 m.[20]

The shearing of the wind is usually three-dimensional,[21] that is, there is also a change in direction between the 'free' pressure gradient-driven geostrophic wind and the wind close to the ground.[22] This is related to the Ekman spiral effect. The cross-isobar angle of the diverted ageostrophic flow near the surface ranges from 10° over open water, to 30° over rough hilly terrain, and can increase to 40°-50° over land at night when the wind speed is very low.[12]

After sundown the wind gradient near the surface increases, with the increasing stability.[23]Atmospheric stability occurring at night with radiative cooling tends to vertically constrain turbulent eddies, thus increasing the wind gradient.[8] The magnitude of the wind gradient is largely influenced by the weather, principally atmospheric stability and the height of any convective boundary layer or capping inversion. This effect is even larger over the sea, where there is much less diurnal variation of the height of the boundary layer than over land.[24] In the convective boundary layer, strong mixing diminishes vertical wind gradient.[25]

Nocturnal and diurnal conditions edit

The planetary boundary layer is different between day and night. During the day inversion layers formed during the night are broken up as a consequence of the turbulent rise of heated air.[26] The boundary layer stabilises "shortly before sunset" and remains so during the night.[26] All this make up a daily cycle.[26] During winter and cloudy days the breakup of the nighttime layering is incomplete and atmospheric conditions established in previous days can persist.[26][27] The breakup of the nighttime boundary layer structure is fast on sunny days.[27] The driving force is convective cells with narrow updraft areas and large areas of gentle downdraft.[27] These cells exceed 200–500 m in diameter.[27]

Constituent layers edit

 
A shelf cloud at the leading edge of a thunderstorm complex on the South Side of Chicago that extends from the Hyde Park community area to over the Regents Park twin towers and out over Lake Michigan

As Navier–Stokes equations suggest, the planetary boundary layer turbulence is produced in the layer with the largest velocity gradients that is at the very surface proximity. This layer – conventionally called a surface layer – constitutes about 10% of the total PBL depth. Above the surface layer the PBL turbulence gradually dissipates, losing its kinetic energy to friction as well as converting the kinetic to potential energy in a density stratified flow. The balance between the rate of the turbulent kinetic energy production and its dissipation determines the planetary boundary layer depth. The PBL depth varies broadly. At a given wind speed, e.g. 8 m/s, and so at a given rate of the turbulence production, a PBL in wintertime Arctic could be as shallow as 50 m, a nocturnal PBL in mid-latitudes could be typically 300 m in thickness, and a tropical PBL in the trade-wind zone could grow to its full theoretical depth of 2000 m. The PBL depth can be 4000 m or higher in late afternoon over desert.

In addition to the surface layer, the planetary boundary layer also comprises the PBL core (between 0.1 and 0.7 of the PBL depth) and the PBL top or entrainment layer or capping inversion layer (between 0.7 and 1 of the PBL depth). Four main external factors determine the PBL depth and its mean vertical structure:

  1. the free atmosphere wind speed;
  2. the surface heat (more exactly buoyancy) balance;
  3. the free atmosphere density stratification;
  4. the free atmosphere vertical wind shear or baroclinicity.

Principal types edit

 

Convective planetary boundary layer (CBL) edit

A convective planetary boundary layer is a type of planetary boundary layer where positive buoyancy flux at the surface creates a thermal instability and thus generates additional or even major turbulence. (This is also known as having CAPE or convective available potential energy; see atmospheric convection.) A convective boundary layer is typical in tropical and mid-latitudes during daytime. Solar heating assisted by the heat released from the water vapor condensation could create so strong convective turbulence that the Free convective layer comprises the entire troposphere up to the tropopause (the boundary in the Earth's atmosphere between the troposphere and the stratosphere), which is at 10 km to 18 km in the Intertropical convergence zone).

Stably stratified planetary boundary layer (SBL) edit

 
Interactions between the carbon (green), water (blue) and heat (red) cycles in the coupled land–ABL system. As the atmospheric boundary layer decreases in height due to subsidence, it experiences an increase in temperature, a reduction in moisture, and a depletion of CO2. This implies a reaction of the land surface ecosystem that will evapotranspire (evaporation from the soil and transpiration from plants) more, to compensate for this loss of moisture in the lower layer, but gradually causing a drying of the soil. (Source: Combe, M., Vilà-Guerau de Arellano, J., Ouwersloot, H. G., Jacobs, C. M. J., and Peters, W.: Two perspectives on the coupled carbon, water and energy exchange in the planetary boundary layer, Biogeosciences, 12, 103–123, .https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-103-2015, 2015)

The SBL is a PBL when negative buoyancy flux at the surface damps the turbulence; see Convective inhibition. An SBL is solely driven by the wind shear turbulence and hence the SBL cannot exist without the free atmosphere wind. An SBL is typical in nighttime at all locations and even in daytime in places where the Earth's surface is colder than the air above. An SBL plays a particularly important role in high latitudes where it is often prolonged (days to months), resulting in very cold air temperatures.

Physical laws and equations of motion, which govern the planetary boundary layer dynamics and microphysics, are strongly non-linear and considerably influenced by properties of the Earth's surface and evolution of processes in the free atmosphere. To deal with this complexity, the whole array of turbulence modelling has been proposed. However, they are often not accurate enough to meet practical requirements. Significant improvements are expected from application of a large eddy simulation technique to problems related to the PBL.

Perhaps the most important processes,[clarification needed] which are critically dependent on the correct representation of the PBL in the atmospheric models (Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project), are turbulent transport of moisture (evapotranspiration) and pollutants (air pollutants). Clouds in the boundary layer influence trade winds, the hydrological cycle, and energy exchange.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Planetary boundary layer | atmospheric science | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
  2. ^ "Free atmosphere". glossary.ametsoc.org. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Geostrophic wind level". glossary.ametsoc.org. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
  4. ^ Wizelius, Tore (2007). Developing Wind Power Projects. London: Earthscan Publications Ltd. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-84407-262-0. The relation between wind speed and height is called the wind profile or wind gradient.
  5. ^ a b Brown, G. (2001). Sun, Wind & Light. New York: Wiley. p. 18. ISBN 0-471-34877-5.
  6. ^ Dalgliesh, W. A. & D. W. Boyd (1 April 1962). . Canadian Building Digest. Archived from the original on 12 November 2007. Retrieved 30 June 2007. Flow near the surface encounters small obstacles that change the wind speed and introduce random vertical and horizontal velocity components at right angles to the main direction of flow.
  7. ^ Hadlock, Charles (1998). Mathematical Modeling in the Environment. Washington: Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 0-88385-709-X.
  8. ^ a b Lal, R. (2005). Encyclopedia of Soil Science. New York: Marcel Dekker. p. 618. ISBN 0-8493-5053-0.
  9. ^ Oke, T. (1987). Boundary Layer Climates. London: Methuen. p. 54. ISBN 0-415-04319-0. Therefore the vertical gradient of mean wind speed (dū/dz) is greatest over smooth terrain, and least over rough surfaces.
  10. ^ a b Crawley, Stanley (1993). Steel Buildings. New York: Wiley. p. 272. ISBN 0-471-84298-2.
  11. ^ Harrison, Roy (1999). Understanding Our Environment. Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry. p. 11. ISBN 0-85404-584-8.
  12. ^ a b Thompson, Russell (1998). Atmospheric Processes and Systems. New York: Routledge. pp. 102–103. ISBN 0-415-17145-8.
  13. ^ Maeda, Takao, Shuichiro Homma, and Yoshiki Ito. Effect of Complex Terrain on Vertical Wind Profile Measured by SODAR Technique. Retrieved on 2008-07-04.
  14. ^ Lubosny, Zbigniew (2003). Wind Turbine Operation in Electric Power Systems: Advanced Modeling. Berlin: Springer. p. 17. ISBN 3-540-40340-X.
  15. ^ Gupta, Ajaya (1993). Guidelines for Design of Low-Rise Buildings Subjected to Lateral Forces. Boca Raton: CRC Press. p. 49. ISBN 0-8493-8969-0.
  16. ^ Stoltman, Joseph (2005). International Perspectives on Natural Disasters: Occurrence, Mitigation, and Consequences. Berlin: Springer. p. 73. ISBN 1-4020-2850-4.
  17. ^ Chen, Wai-Fah (1997). Handbook of Structural Engineering. Boca Raton: CRC Press. pp. 12–50. ISBN 0-8493-2674-5.
  18. ^ Ghosal, M. (2005). "7.8.5 Vertical Wind Speed Gradient". Renewable Energy Resources. City: Alpha Science International, Ltd. pp. 378–379. ISBN 978-1-84265-125-4.
  19. ^ Stull, Roland (1997). An Introduction to Boundary Layer Meteorology. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 442. ISBN 90-277-2768-6. ...both the wind gradient and the mean wind profile itself can usually be described diagnostically by the log wind profile.
  20. ^ Thuillier, R.H.; Lappe, U.O. (1964). "Wind and Temperature Profile Characteristics from Observations on a 1400 ft Tower". Journal of Applied Meteorology. American Meteorological Society. 3 (3): 299–306. Bibcode:1964JApMe...3..299T. doi:10.1175/1520-0450(1964)003<0299:WATPCF>2.0.CO;2. ISSN 1520-0450.
  21. ^ Mcilveen, J. (1992). Fundamentals of Weather and Climate. London: Chapman & Hall. p. 184. ISBN 0-412-41160-1.
  22. ^ Burton, Tony (2001). Wind Energy Handbook. London: J. Wiley. p. 20. ISBN 0-471-48997-2.
  23. ^ Köpp, F.; Schwiesow, R.L.; Werner, C. (January 1984). "Remote Measurements of Boundary-Layer Wind Profiles Using a CW Doppler Lidar". Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology. American Meteorological Society. 23 (1): 153. Bibcode:1984JApMe..23..148K. doi:10.1175/1520-0450(1984)023<0148:RMOBLW>2.0.CO;2. ISSN 1520-0450.
  24. ^ Johansson, C.; Uppsala, S.; Smedman, A.S. (2002). "Does the height of the boundary layer influence the turbulence structure near the surface over the Baltic Sea?". 15th Conference on Boundary Layer and Turbulence. 15th Conference on Boundary Layer and Turbulence. American Meteorological Society.
  25. ^ Shao, Yaping (2000). Physics and Modelling of Wind Erosion. City: Kluwer Academic. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-7923-6657-7. In the bulk of the convective boundary layer, strong mixing diminishes vertical wind gradient...
  26. ^ a b c d Foken 2017, p. 7.
  27. ^ a b c d Foken 2017, p. 8.
  • Foken, Thomas (2017). Micrometeorology. Translated by Nappo, Carmen J.; Klein. Berlin, Germany: Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-25439-0.

External links edit

  • Description of the planetary boundary layer at theweatherprediction.com
  • American Meteorological Society glossary entry

planetary, boundary, layer, confused, with, planetary, boundaries, meteorology, planetary, boundary, layer, also, known, atmospheric, boundary, layer, peplosphere, lowest, part, atmosphere, behaviour, directly, influenced, contact, with, planetary, surface, ea. Not to be confused with planetary boundaries In meteorology the planetary boundary layer PBL also known as the atmospheric boundary layer ABL or peplosphere is the lowest part of the atmosphere and its behaviour is directly influenced by its contact with a planetary surface 1 On Earth it usually responds to changes in surface radiative forcing in an hour or less In this layer physical quantities such as flow velocity temperature and moisture display rapid fluctuations turbulence and vertical mixing is strong Above the PBL is the free atmosphere 2 where the wind is approximately geostrophic parallel to the isobars 3 while within the PBL the wind is affected by surface drag and turns across the isobars see Ekman layer for more detail source source source source source source source source This movie is a combined visualization of the PBL and wind dynamics over the Los Angeles basin for a one month period Vertical motion of the PBL is represented by the gray blanket The height of the PBL is largely driven by convection associated with the changing surface temperature of the Earth for example rising during the day and sinking at night The colored arrows represent the strength and direction of winds at different altitudes Depiction of where the planetary boundary layer lies on a sunny day Contents 1 Cause of surface wind gradient 2 Nocturnal and diurnal conditions 3 Constituent layers 4 Principal types 4 1 Convective planetary boundary layer CBL 4 2 Stably stratified planetary boundary layer SBL 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksCause of surface wind gradient edit nbsp The difference in the amount of aerosols below and above the boundary layer is easy to see in this aerial photograph Light pollution from the city of Berlin is strongly scattered below the layer but above the layer it mostly propagates out into space See also Wind shear Wind gradient Wind engineering and Ekman layer Typically due to aerodynamic drag there is a wind gradient in the wind flow 100 meters above the Earth s surface the surface layer of the planetary boundary layer Wind speed increases with increasing height above the ground starting from zero 4 due to the no slip condition 5 Flow near the surface encounters obstacles that reduce the wind speed and introduce random vertical and horizontal velocity components at right angles to the main direction of flow 6 This turbulence causes vertical mixing between the air moving horizontally at one level and the air at those levels immediately above and below it which is important in dispersion of pollutants 7 and in soil erosion 8 The reduction in velocity near the surface is a function of surface roughness so wind velocity profiles are quite different for different terrain types 5 Rough irregular ground and man made obstructions on the ground can reduce the geostrophic wind speed by 40 to 50 9 10 Over open water or ice the reduction may be only 20 to 30 11 12 These effects are taken into account when siting wind turbines 13 14 For engineering purposes the wind gradient is modeled as a simple shear exhibiting a vertical velocity profile varying according to a power law with a constant exponential coefficient based on surface type The height above ground where surface friction has a negligible effect on wind speed is called the gradient height and the wind speed above this height is assumed to be a constant called the gradient wind speed 10 15 16 For example typical values for the predicted gradient height are 457 m for large cities 366 m for suburbs 274 m for open terrain and 213 m for open sea 17 Although the power law exponent approximation is convenient it has no theoretical basis 18 When the temperature profile is adiabatic the wind speed should vary logarithmically with height 19 Measurements over open terrain in 1961 showed good agreement with the logarithmic fit up to 100 m or so within the surface layer with near constant average wind speed up through 1000 m 20 The shearing of the wind is usually three dimensional 21 that is there is also a change in direction between the free pressure gradient driven geostrophic wind and the wind close to the ground 22 This is related to the Ekman spiral effect The cross isobar angle of the diverted ageostrophic flow near the surface ranges from 10 over open water to 30 over rough hilly terrain and can increase to 40 50 over land at night when the wind speed is very low 12 After sundown the wind gradient near the surface increases with the increasing stability 23 Atmospheric stability occurring at night with radiative cooling tends to vertically constrain turbulent eddies thus increasing the wind gradient 8 The magnitude of the wind gradient is largely influenced by the weather principally atmospheric stability and the height of any convective boundary layer or capping inversion This effect is even larger over the sea where there is much less diurnal variation of the height of the boundary layer than over land 24 In the convective boundary layer strong mixing diminishes vertical wind gradient 25 Nocturnal and diurnal conditions editThe planetary boundary layer is different between day and night During the day inversion layers formed during the night are broken up as a consequence of the turbulent rise of heated air 26 The boundary layer stabilises shortly before sunset and remains so during the night 26 All this make up a daily cycle 26 During winter and cloudy days the breakup of the nighttime layering is incomplete and atmospheric conditions established in previous days can persist 26 27 The breakup of the nighttime boundary layer structure is fast on sunny days 27 The driving force is convective cells with narrow updraft areas and large areas of gentle downdraft 27 These cells exceed 200 500 m in diameter 27 Constituent layers edit nbsp A shelf cloud at the leading edge of a thunderstorm complex on the South Side of Chicago that extends from the Hyde Park community area to over the Regents Park twin towers and out over Lake MichiganAs Navier Stokes equations suggest the planetary boundary layer turbulence is produced in the layer with the largest velocity gradients that is at the very surface proximity This layer conventionally called a surface layer constitutes about 10 of the total PBL depth Above the surface layer the PBL turbulence gradually dissipates losing its kinetic energy to friction as well as converting the kinetic to potential energy in a density stratified flow The balance between the rate of the turbulent kinetic energy production and its dissipation determines the planetary boundary layer depth The PBL depth varies broadly At a given wind speed e g 8 m s and so at a given rate of the turbulence production a PBL in wintertime Arctic could be as shallow as 50 m a nocturnal PBL in mid latitudes could be typically 300 m in thickness and a tropical PBL in the trade wind zone could grow to its full theoretical depth of 2000 m The PBL depth can be 4000 m or higher in late afternoon over desert In addition to the surface layer the planetary boundary layer also comprises the PBL core between 0 1 and 0 7 of the PBL depth and the PBL top or entrainment layer or capping inversion layer between 0 7 and 1 of the PBL depth Four main external factors determine the PBL depth and its mean vertical structure the free atmosphere wind speed the surface heat more exactly buoyancy balance the free atmosphere density stratification the free atmosphere vertical wind shear or baroclinicity Further information Ekman layerPrincipal types edit nbsp Convective planetary boundary layer CBL edit Main article Convective planetary boundary layer A convective planetary boundary layer is a type of planetary boundary layer where positive buoyancy flux at the surface creates a thermal instability and thus generates additional or even major turbulence This is also known as having CAPE or convective available potential energy see atmospheric convection A convective boundary layer is typical in tropical and mid latitudes during daytime Solar heating assisted by the heat released from the water vapor condensation could create so strong convective turbulence that the Free convective layer comprises the entire troposphere up to the tropopause the boundary in the Earth s atmosphere between the troposphere and the stratosphere which is at 10 km to 18 km in the Intertropical convergence zone Stably stratified planetary boundary layer SBL edit nbsp Interactions between the carbon green water blue and heat red cycles in the coupled land ABL system As the atmospheric boundary layer decreases in height due to subsidence it experiences an increase in temperature a reduction in moisture and a depletion of CO2 This implies a reaction of the land surface ecosystem that will evapotranspire evaporation from the soil and transpiration from plants more to compensate for this loss of moisture in the lower layer but gradually causing a drying of the soil Source Combe M Vila Guerau de Arellano J Ouwersloot H G Jacobs C M J and Peters W Two perspectives on the coupled carbon water and energy exchange in the planetary boundary layer Biogeosciences 12 103 123 https doi org 10 5194 bg 12 103 2015 2015 The SBL is a PBL when negative buoyancy flux at the surface damps the turbulence see Convective inhibition An SBL is solely driven by the wind shear turbulence and hence the SBL cannot exist without the free atmosphere wind An SBL is typical in nighttime at all locations and even in daytime in places where the Earth s surface is colder than the air above An SBL plays a particularly important role in high latitudes where it is often prolonged days to months resulting in very cold air temperatures Physical laws and equations of motion which govern the planetary boundary layer dynamics and microphysics are strongly non linear and considerably influenced by properties of the Earth s surface and evolution of processes in the free atmosphere To deal with this complexity the whole array of turbulence modelling has been proposed However they are often not accurate enough to meet practical requirements Significant improvements are expected from application of a large eddy simulation technique to problems related to the PBL Perhaps the most important processes clarification needed which are critically dependent on the correct representation of the PBL in the atmospheric models Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project are turbulent transport of moisture evapotranspiration and pollutants air pollutants Clouds in the boundary layer influence trade winds the hydrological cycle and energy exchange See also editAeroplankton Boundary layer Ekman layer Mixed layer Alpine planetary boundary layer Turbulence Wind shear Microburst Atmospheric physics Atmospheric sciences Atmospheric electricity Astronomical seeing Remote sensing atmospheric boundary layer Representations of the atmospheric boundary layer in global climate models Atmospheric dispersion modelingReferences edit Planetary boundary layer atmospheric science Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 28 June 2020 Free atmosphere glossary ametsoc org Retrieved 21 March 2021 Geostrophic wind level glossary ametsoc org Retrieved 20 September 2018 Wizelius Tore 2007 Developing Wind Power Projects London Earthscan Publications Ltd p 40 ISBN 978 1 84407 262 0 The relation between wind speed and height is called the wind profile or wind gradient a b Brown G 2001 Sun Wind amp Light New York Wiley p 18 ISBN 0 471 34877 5 Dalgliesh W A amp D W Boyd 1 April 1962 CBD 28 Wind on Buildings Canadian Building Digest Archived from the original on 12 November 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 Flow near the surface encounters small obstacles that change the wind speed and introduce random vertical and horizontal velocity components at right angles to the main direction of flow Hadlock Charles 1998 Mathematical Modeling in the Environment Washington Mathematical Association of America ISBN 0 88385 709 X a b Lal R 2005 Encyclopedia of Soil Science New York Marcel Dekker p 618 ISBN 0 8493 5053 0 Oke T 1987 Boundary Layer Climates London Methuen p 54 ISBN 0 415 04319 0 Therefore the vertical gradient of mean wind speed du dz is greatest over smooth terrain and least over rough surfaces a b Crawley Stanley 1993 Steel Buildings New York Wiley p 272 ISBN 0 471 84298 2 Harrison Roy 1999 Understanding Our Environment Cambridge Royal Society of Chemistry p 11 ISBN 0 85404 584 8 a b Thompson Russell 1998 Atmospheric Processes and Systems New York Routledge pp 102 103 ISBN 0 415 17145 8 Maeda Takao Shuichiro Homma and Yoshiki Ito Effect of Complex Terrain on Vertical Wind Profile Measured by SODAR Technique Retrieved on 2008 07 04 Lubosny Zbigniew 2003 Wind Turbine Operation in Electric Power Systems Advanced Modeling Berlin Springer p 17 ISBN 3 540 40340 X Gupta Ajaya 1993 Guidelines for Design of Low Rise Buildings Subjected to Lateral Forces Boca Raton CRC Press p 49 ISBN 0 8493 8969 0 Stoltman Joseph 2005 International Perspectives on Natural Disasters Occurrence Mitigation and Consequences Berlin Springer p 73 ISBN 1 4020 2850 4 Chen Wai Fah 1997 Handbook of Structural Engineering Boca Raton CRC Press pp 12 50 ISBN 0 8493 2674 5 Ghosal M 2005 7 8 5 Vertical Wind Speed Gradient Renewable Energy Resources City Alpha Science International Ltd pp 378 379 ISBN 978 1 84265 125 4 Stull Roland 1997 An Introduction to Boundary Layer Meteorology Boston Kluwer Academic Publishers p 442 ISBN 90 277 2768 6 both the wind gradient and the mean wind profile itself can usually be described diagnostically by the log wind profile Thuillier R H Lappe U O 1964 Wind and Temperature Profile Characteristics from Observations on a 1400 ft Tower Journal of Applied Meteorology American Meteorological Society 3 3 299 306 Bibcode 1964JApMe 3 299T doi 10 1175 1520 0450 1964 003 lt 0299 WATPCF gt 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 1520 0450 Mcilveen J 1992 Fundamentals of Weather and Climate London Chapman amp Hall p 184 ISBN 0 412 41160 1 Burton Tony 2001 Wind Energy Handbook London J Wiley p 20 ISBN 0 471 48997 2 Kopp F Schwiesow R L Werner C January 1984 Remote Measurements of Boundary Layer Wind Profiles Using a CW Doppler Lidar Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology American Meteorological Society 23 1 153 Bibcode 1984JApMe 23 148K doi 10 1175 1520 0450 1984 023 lt 0148 RMOBLW gt 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 1520 0450 Johansson C Uppsala S Smedman A S 2002 Does the height of the boundary layer influence the turbulence structure near the surface over the Baltic Sea 15th Conference on Boundary Layer and Turbulence 15th Conference on Boundary Layer and Turbulence American Meteorological Society Shao Yaping 2000 Physics and Modelling of Wind Erosion City Kluwer Academic p 69 ISBN 978 0 7923 6657 7 In the bulk of the convective boundary layer strong mixing diminishes vertical wind gradient a b c d Foken 2017 p 7 a b c d Foken 2017 p 8 Foken Thomas 2017 Micrometeorology Translated by Nappo Carmen J Klein Berlin Germany Springer ISBN 978 3 642 25439 0 External links editDescription of the planetary boundary layer at theweatherprediction com American Meteorological Society glossary entryPortals nbsp Weather nbsp Earth sciences nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Planetary boundary layer amp oldid 1182987249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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