The Namib Turbulence Experiment: Investigating Surface-Atmosphere Heat Transfer in Three Dimensions

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Rainer V.J. Hilland - , University of Freiburg (Author)
  • Christian Bernhofer - , Institute of Hydrology and Meteorology (Author)
  • May Bohmann - , University of Freiburg (Author)
  • Andreas Christen - , University of Freiburg (Author)
  • Marwan Katurji - , University of Canterbury (Author)
  • Gillian Maggs-Kölling - , Gobabeb Namib Research Institute (Author)
  • Matthias Krauß - , Infratec GmbH (Author)
  • Jarl A. Larsen - , University of Basel (Author)
  • Eugene Marais - , Gobabeb Namib Research Institute (Author)
  • Andrea Pitacco - , University of Padua (Author)
  • Benjamin Schumacher - , University of Canterbury (Author)
  • Robert Spirig - , University of Basel (Author)
  • Nadia Vendrame - , University of Padua (Author)
  • Roland Vogt - , University of Basel (Author)

Abstract

The Namib Turbulence Experiment (NamTEX) was a multinational micrometeorological campaign conducted in the central Namib Desert to investigate three-dimensional surface layer turbulence and the spatiotemporal patterns of heat transfer between the subsurface, surface, and atmosphere. The Namib provides an ideal location for fundamental research that revisits some key assumptions in micrometeorology that are implicitly included in the parameterizations describing energy exchange in weather forecasting and climate models: homogenous flat surfaces, no vegetation, little moisture, and cloud-free skies create a strong and consistent diurnal forcing, resulting in a wide range of atmospheric stabilities. A novel combination of instruments was used to simultaneously measure variables and processes relevant to heat transfer: a 3-km fiber-optic distributed temperature sensor (DTS) was suspended in a pseudo-three-dimensional array within a 300 m × 300 m domain to provide vertical cross sections of air temperature fluctuations. Aerial and ground-based thermal imagers recorded high-resolution surface temperature fluctuations within the domain and revealed the spatial thermal imprint of atmospheric structures responsible for heat exchange. High-resolution soil temperature and moisture profiles together with heat flux plates provided information on near-surface soil dynamics. Turbulent heat exchange was measured with a vertical array of five eddy-covariance point measurements on a 21-m mast, as well as by collocated small- and large-aperture scintillometers. This contribution first details the scientific goals and experimental setup of the NamTEX campaign. Then, using a typical day, we demonstrate (i) the coupling of surface layer, surface, and soil temperatures using high-frequency temperature measurements, (ii) differences in spatial and temporal standard deviations of the horizontal temperature field using spatially distributed measurements, and (iii) horizontal anisotropy of the turbulent temperature field.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E741-E759
JournalBulletin of the American Meteorological Society
Volume103
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2022
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Keywords

  • Africa, Atmosphere, Atmosphere-land interaction, Energy budget/balance, Turbulence