scholarly journals Modeling relative wind speed by optical stratification porosity within the canopy of a coastal protective forest at different stem densities

Silva Fennica ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiao-jun Zhu ◽  
Yutaka Gonda ◽  
Takeshi Matsuzaki ◽  
Masashi Yamamoto
2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 589-603 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiangzhou Song

AbstractSea surface currents are commonly neglected when estimating the air–sea turbulent heat fluxes in bulk formulas. Using buoy observations in the Bohai Sea, this paper investigated the effects of near-coast multiscale currents on the quantification of turbulent heat fluxes, namely, latent heat flux (LH) and sensible heat flux (SH). The maximum current reached 1 m s−1 in magnitude, and a steady northeastward current of 0.16 m s−1 appeared in the southern Bohai Strait. The predominant tidal signal was the semidiurnal current, followed by diurnal components. The mean absolute surface wind was from the northeast with a speed of approximately 3 m s−1. The surface winds at a height of 11 m were dominated by the East Asian monsoon. As a result of upwind flow, the monthly mean differences in LH and SH between the estimates with and without surface currents ranged from 1 to 2 W m−2 in July (stable boundary layer) and November (unstable boundary layer). The hourly differences were on average 10 W m−2 and ranged from 0 to 24 W m−2 due to changes in the relative wind speed by high-frequency rotating surface tidal currents. The diurnal variability in LH/SH was demonstrated under stable and unstable boundary conditions. Observations provided an accurate benchmark for flux comparisons. The newly updated atmospheric reanalysis products MERRA-2 and ERA5 were superior to the 1° OAFlux data at this buoy location. However, future efforts in heat flux computation are still needed to, for example, consider surface currents and resolve diurnal variations.


Author(s):  
Jun Kong ◽  
Zhiyao Song

In estuary and coastal areas the storm surge will usually occur in typhoon season. When simulating the storm surge by numerical model, the wind speed at the height of 10m above the mean sea level will be usually used. Determining the wind drag stress on free surface reasonably plays an important role to simulate the storm surge accurately. In the past numerical models, the wind drag stress on free surface was calculated only considering the relative wind speed. There are many formulas about wind stress can be used, whereas these formulas are usually got in laboratory, where the water surface fluctuates in a small range, and the water elevation itself has not been considered in formula. Actually in some place, the astronomical tidal range is large, such as Yangtze estuary and Hangzhou bay in China, and during typhoon season, the water fluctuation range is much larger than ever there. In conventional method the wind stress will be underestimate in flood tide and be over-valuated in ebb tide without considering the fluctuation of water, so it is obviously unsuitable to take no account of the influence of tidal level on wind stress. Therefore in the intensive tide coastal area, the relationship of the relative wind speed, tidal level should be considered together. A new kind of wind stress formula has been established in this paper and been adopted in simulating the storm surge of typhoon Winnie in Yangtze estuary, and the results are better and satisfying.


2006 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 351-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bengamin I. Moat ◽  
Margaret J. Yelland ◽  
Anthony F. Molland

Abstract Wind speed measurements obtained from ship-mounted anemometers are biased by the presence of the ship, which distorts the airflow to the anemometer. Previous studies have simulated the flow over detailed models of individual research ships in order to quantify the effect of flow distortion at well-exposed anemometers, usually sited on a mast in the ship's bows. In contrast, little work has been undertaken to examine the effects of flow distortion at anemometers sited on other merchant ships participating in the voluntary observing ship (VOS) project. Anemometers are usually sited on a mast above the bridge of VOS where the effects of flow distortion may be severe. The several thousand VOS vary a great deal in shape and size and it would be impractical to study each individual ship. This study examines the airflow above the bridge of a typical, or generic, tanker/bulk carrier/general cargo ship using computational fluid dynamics models. The results show that the airflow separates at the upwind leading edge of the bridge and a region of severely decelerated flow exists close to the bridge top with a region of accelerated flow above. Large velocity gradients occur between the two regions. The wind speed bias is highly dependent upon the anemometer location and varies from accelerations of 10% or more to decelerations of 100%. The wind speed bias at particular locations also varies with the relative wind direction, that is, the angle of the ship to the wind. Wind speed biases for various anemometer positions are given for bow-on and beam-on flows.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 3487-3506
Author(s):  
Sebastian Landwehr ◽  
Iris Thurnherr ◽  
Nicolas Cassar ◽  
Martin Gysel-Beer ◽  
Julia Schmale

Abstract. At sea, wind forcing is responsible for the formation and development of surface waves and represents an important source of near-surface turbulence. Therefore, processes related to near-surface turbulence and wave breaking, such as sea spray emission and air–sea gas exchange, are often parameterised with wind speed. Thus, shipborne wind speed measurements provide highly relevant observations. They can, however, be compromised by flow distortion due to the ship's structure and objects near the anemometer that modify the airflow, leading to a deflection of the apparent wind direction and positive or negative acceleration of the apparent wind speed. The resulting errors in the estimated true wind speed can be greatly magnified at low wind speeds. For some research ships, correction factors have been derived from computational fluid dynamic models or through direct comparison with wind speed measurements from buoys. These correction factors can, however, lose their validity due to changes in the structures near the anemometer and, thus, require frequent re-evaluation, which is costly in either computational power or ship time. Here, we evaluate if global atmospheric reanalysis data can be used to quantify the flow distortion bias in shipborne wind speed measurements. The method is tested on data from the Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition onboard the R/V Akademik Tryoshnikov, which are compared to ERA-5 reanalysis wind speeds. We find that, depending on the relative wind direction, the relative wind speed and direction measurements are biased by −37 % to +22 % and -17∘ to +11∘ respectively. The resulting error in the true wind speed is +11.5 % on average but ranges from −4 % to +41 % (5th and 95th percentile). After applying the bias correction, the uncertainty in the true wind speed is reduced to ±5 % and depends mainly on the average accuracy of the ERA-5 data over the period of the experiment. The obvious drawback of this approach is the potential intrusion of model biases in the correction factors. We show that this problem can be somewhat mitigated when the error propagation in the true wind correction is accounted for and used to weight the observations. We discuss the potential caveats and limitations of this approach and conclude that it can be used to quantify flow distortion bias for ships that operate on a global scale. The method can also be valuable to verify computational fluid dynamic studies of airflow distortion on research vessels.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 1348
Author(s):  
Hyeonsu Nam ◽  
Gun Woo Kim ◽  
Hyunyong Lee ◽  
Byung Chul Choi ◽  
Gilltae Roh ◽  
...  

International ships carrying liquefied fuel are strongly recommended to install vent masts to control the pressure of cargo tanks in the event of an emergency. However, the gas emitted from a vent mast may be hazardous for the crew of the ship. In the present study, the volume and length of the flammable zone (FZ) created by the emitted gas above the ship was examined. Various scenarios comprising four parameters, namely, relative wind speed, arrangement of vent masts, combination of emissions among four vent masts, and direction of emission from the vent-mast outlet were considered. The results showed that the convection acts on the volume and length of an FZ. The volume of an FZ increases when there is a reduction in convection reaching the FZ and when strong convection brings hydrogen from a nearby FZ. The length of the FZ is also related to convection. An FZ is elongated if the center of a vortex is located inside the FZ, because this vortex traps hydrogen inside the FZ. The length of an FZ decreases if the center of the vortex is located outside the FZ, as such a vortex brings more fresh air into the FZ.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Huang ◽  
Decheng Wan

In order to further understand the coupled aero-hydrodynamic performance of the floating offshore wind turbine (FOWT) in realistic ocean environment, it is necessary to investigate the interference effects between the unsteady aerodynamics of the wind turbine and different degree-of-freedom (DOF) platform motions under combined wind-wave excitation. In this paper, a validated CFD analysis tool FOWT-UALM-SJTU with modified actuator line model is applied for the coupled aero-hydrodynamic simulations of a spar-type FOWT system. The aero-hydrodynamic characteristics of the FOWT with various platform motion modes and different wind turbine states are compared and analyzed to explore the influence of the interference effects between the wind turbine and the floating platform on the performance of the FOWT. The dynamic responses of local relative wind speed and local attack angle at the blade section and wind-wave forces acting on the floating platform are discussed in detail to reveal the interaction mechanism between the aerodynamic loads and different DOF platform motions. It is shown that the surge motion and the pitch motion of the floating platform both significantly alter the local attack angle, while only the platform pitch motion have significant impacts on the local relative wind speed experienced by the rotating blades. Besides, the shaft tilt and the pro-cone angle of the wind turbine and the height-dependent wind speed all contribute to the variation of the local attack angle. The coupling between the platform motions along different DOFs is obviously amplified by the aerodynamic forces derived from the wind turbine. In addition, the wake deflection phenomenon is clearly observed in the near wake region when platform pitch motion is considered. The dynamic pitch motion of the floating platform also contributes to the severe wake velocity deficit and the increased wake width.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Paul

Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was used to analyze the flow around a modern research ship to ensure that exhaust gases would not adversely impact the air sampling mast. The air sampling mast measures and records the air to understand the environment that the vessel is operating in. There are operational situations where the wind speed and direction are such that the engine exhaust gases can be near the air sampling mast. The results showed that for most of conditions examined the exhaust gases would not reach the air sampling mast. The stern to bow wind was the only direction that had an interaction between the air sampling mast and exhaust gases. The lower the relative wind speed the more likely that interaction. The wind speeds and directions that do have an interaction with the air sampling mast can be used to help the operator set guidelines on when to use the air sampling mast.


2016 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 1451-1463 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evert I. F. de Bruijn ◽  
Siebren de Haan ◽  
Fred C. Bosveld ◽  
Ben Wichers Schreur ◽  
Albert A. M. Holtslag

Abstract High-resolution upper-air wind observations are sparse, and additional observations are a welcome source of meteorological information. In this paper the potential of applying balloon flights for upper-air wind measurements is explored, and the meteorological content of this information is investigated. The displacement of a hot-air balloon is a measure for the wind speed and direction and thus a potential source for wind observations in the lower part of the troposphere. The response time of the balloon on the changing wind is fast in the beginning and levels off for smaller relative wind speeds. Four case studies are presented, and the balloon-derived winds are compared with other wind observations and with results from the HIRLAM–ALADIN Research on Mesoscale Operational NWP in Europe (HARMONIE) model. It turns out that hot-air balloon tracks can indeed produce useful wind observations just above and in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL).


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (16) ◽  
pp. 1876
Author(s):  
He Fang ◽  
William Perrie ◽  
Guosheng Zhang ◽  
Tao Xie ◽  
Shahid Khurshid ◽  
...  

We investigated the use of C-band RADARSAT Constellation Mission (RCM) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) for retrieval of ocean surface wind speeds by using four new channels (right circular transmit, vertical receive (RV); right circular transmit, horizontal receive (RH); right circular transmit, left circular transmit (RL); and right circular transmit, right circular receive (RR)) in compact polarimetry (CP) mode. Using 256 buoy measurements collocated with RADARSAT-2 fine beam quad-polarized scenes, RCM CP data was simulated using a “CP simulator”. Provided that the relative wind direction is known, our results demonstrate that wind speed can be retrieved from RV, RH and RL polarization channels using existing C-band model (CMOD) geophysical model function (GMF) and polarization ratio (PR) models. Simulated RR-polarized radar returns have a strong linear relationship with speed and are less sensitive to relative wind direction and incidence angle. Therefore, a model is proposed for the RR-polarized synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data. Our results show that the proposed model can provide an efficient methodology for wind speed retrieval.


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