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The elliptical dimension of space-time atmospheric stratification of passive admixtures using lidar data
Authors:A Radkevich  K Strawbridge
Institution:a Department of Physics, McGill University, 3600 University St. Montreal, QC, Canada H3A 2T8
b Science and Technology Branch, Environment Canada, Centre for Atmospheric Research Experiments, 6248 Eight Line, Egbert, ON, Canada, L0L 1N0
c CEREVE, Ecole Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées, 6-8, Ave. Blaise Pascal, Cité Descartes, 77455 Marne-la-Valleé, Cedex 2, France
d Météo France, 1 Quai Branly, Paris, 75007, France
Abstract:State-of-the-art airborne lidar data of passive scalars have shown that the spatial stratification of the atmosphere is scaling: the vertical extent (Δz) of structures is typically ≈ΔxHz where Δx is the horizontal extent and Hz is a stratification exponent. Assuming horizontal isotropy, the volumes of the structures therefore vary as ΔxΔxΔxHzxDs where the “elliptical dimension” Ds characterizes the rate at which the volumes of typical non-intermittent structures vary with scale. Work on vertical cross-sections has shown that 2+Hz=2.55±0.02 (close to the theoretical prediction 23/9).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.
Keywords:Stratification  Turbulence  Multifractals  Scaling  Atmospheric structure  Passive scalars
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