Shannon, H.D., Young, G.S., M.A. Yates, M.R. Fuller, and W.S. Seegar, 2002
Measurements of thermal updraft intensity over complex terrain using American white pelicans and a simple boundary-layer forecast model
Boundary-Layer Meteorol., 104, 167-199.
Abstract
An examination of boundary-layer meteorological and avian aerodynamic theories
suggests that soaring birds can be used to measure the magnitude of vertical
air motions within the boundary layer. These theories are applied to obtain
mixed-layer normalized thermal updraft intensity over both flat and complex
terrain from the climb rates of soaring American white pelicans and from diagnostic
boundarylayer model-produced estimates of the boundary-layer depth zi and the
convective velocity scale w*. Comparison of the flatland data with the profiles
of normalized updraft velocity obtained from previous studies reveals that the
pelican-derived measurements of thermal updraft intensity are in close agreement
with those obtained using traditional research aircraft and large eddy simulation
(LES) in the height range of 0.2 to 0.8 zi. Given the success of this method,
the profiles of thermal vertical velocity over the
flatland and the nearby mountains are compared. This comparison shows that these
profiles are statistically indistinguishable over this height range, indicating
that the profile for thermal updraft intensity varies little over this sample
of complex terrain. These observations support the findings of a recent LES
study that explored the turbulent structure of the boundary layer using a range
of terrain specifications. For terrain similar in scale to that encountered
in this study, results of the LES suggest that the terrain caused less than
an 11% variation in the standard deviation of vertical velocity.