Bulk turbulence scale: Difference between revisions
From Glossary of Meteorology
imported>Perlwikibot No edit summary |
m (Rewrite with Template:Term and clean up) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Term | |||
|Display title=bulk turbulence scale | |||
{{ | |Definitions={{Definition | ||
|Num=1 | |||
|Meaning=An average measure of [[turbulence]] in the [[stable boundary layer]] (SBL), defined as the ratio of e-folding depth of cooling to the [[temperature]] decrease at the surface. | |||
|Explanation=Because the SBL has no well-defined depth, and because the amount of cooling and [[turbulence intensity|turbulence intensity]] varies continuously with height, the bulk scale provides an overall measure of turbulence. Typical magnitudes vary from 3 m K<sup>-1</sup> for light turbulence to 15 m K<sup>-1</sup> for strong turbulence. | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
Latest revision as of 22:22, 13 January 2024
An average measure of turbulence in the stable boundary layer (SBL), defined as the ratio of e-folding depth of cooling to the temperature decrease at the surface.
Because the SBL has no well-defined depth, and because the amount of cooling and turbulence intensity varies continuously with height, the bulk scale provides an overall measure of turbulence. Typical magnitudes vary from 3 m K-1 for light turbulence to 15 m K-1 for strong turbulence.