Parametric modeling of mixed-layer turbulent structures based on sounding data
Related Experiment Videos
View abstract on PubMed
Summary
This study analyzed optical turbulence in China
Area of Science:
- Atmospheric boundary layer research
- Optical turbulence characterization
- Geophysical sciences
Background:
- Optical turbulence significantly impacts atmospheric sensing and communication.
- Understanding vertical turbulence structure is crucial for modeling atmospheric phenomena.
- Previous models often lack sufficient detail on turbulence within the entrainment zone.
Purpose of the Study:
- To investigate the vertical characteristics of optical turbulence in China's atmospheric boundary layer.
- To develop and validate a parameterization model for mixed-layer turbulence structure.
- To assess the impact of vertical resolution on estimating the atmospheric refractive index structure constant (Cn2).
Main Methods:
- Utilized high-resolution radiosonde data from three distinct Chinese regions.
- Developed a mixed-layer turbulence structure parameterization model.
- Validated an exponential decay model for turbulence attenuation across different vertical resolutions (10m, 50m, 100m).
- Proposed a dual-model framework integrating lognormal and polynomial methods for entrainment zone turbulence.
Main Results:
- Observed significant regional variations in turbulence decay patterns (h^-4/3 vs. h^-2).
- Validated the robustness of the exponential decay model for turbulence.
- Demonstrated the effectiveness of the dual-model framework in characterizing localized strong turbulence layers.
- Showcased the framework's applicability across different sites.
Conclusions:
- Regional atmospheric conditions and terrain influence optical turbulence decay.
- The developed dual-model framework accurately quantifies anomalous Cn2 enhancements in the entrainment zone.
- Findings support advancements in adaptive optics, laser communication, and pollutant dispersion modeling.