Extremes, intermittency and time reversibility of atmospheric turbulence at the cross-over from production to inertial scales
E. Zorzetto, A.D. Bragg, G. Katul

TL;DR
This study investigates how atmospheric stability influences turbulence characteristics, especially temperature intermittency and time irreversibility, at the transition from production to inertial scales using high Reynolds number measurements.
Contribution
It provides experimental insights into the effects of stability parameter $b6$ on turbulence intermittency, asymmetry, and reversibility, extending understanding at very high Reynolds numbers.
Findings
Temperature shows greater intermittency than velocity.
She-Leveque model describes velocity scaling without tunable parameters.
Atmospheric stability significantly impacts temperature dynamics and turbulence asymmetry.
Abstract
The effects of mechanical generation of turbulent kinetic energy and buoyancy forces on the statistics of air temperature and velocity increments are experimentally investigated at the cross over from production to inertial range scales. The ratio of an approximated mechanical to buoyant production (or destruction) of turbulent kinetic energy can be used to form a dimensionless stability parameter that classifies the state of the atmosphere as common in many atmospheric surface layer studies. Here, we assess how affects the scale-wise evolution of the probability of extreme air temperature excursions, their asymmetry and time reversibility. The analysis makes use of high frequency velocity and air temperature time series measurements collected at =5 m above a grass surface at very large Reynolds numbers ( is the friction velocity and…
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