Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
976721 Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications 2007 19 Pages PDF
Abstract
In this paper we extend these (x, z) analyses to (z, t). In the absence of overall advection, the lifetime Δt of a structure of size Δx varies as ΔxHt with Ht=2/3 so that the overall space-time dimension is Dst=29/9=3.22…. However, horizontal and vertical advection lead to new exponents: we argue that the temporal stratification exponent Ht≈1 or ≈0.7 depending on the relative importance of horizontal versus vertical advection velocities. We empirically test these space-time predictions using vertical-time (z, t) cross-sections using passive scalar surrogates (aerosol backscatter ratios from lidar) at ∼3 m resolution in the vertical, 0.5-30 s in time and spanning 3-4 orders of magnitude in scale as well as new analyses of vertical (x, z) cross-sections (spanning over 3 orders of magnitude in both x, z directions). In order to test the theory for density fluctuations at arbitrary displacements in (Δz, Δt) and (Δx, Δz) spaces, we developed and applied a new Anisotropic Scaling Analysis Technique (ASAT) based on nonlinear coordinate transformations. Applying this and other analyses to data spanning more than 3 orders of magnitude of space-time scales we determined the anisotropic scaling of space-time finding the empirical value Dst=3.13±0.16. The analyses also show that both cirrus clouds and aerosols had very similar space-time scaling properties. We point out that this model is compatible with (nonlinear) “turbulence” waves, hence potentially explaining the observed atmospheric structures.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Mathematical Physics
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