C.D. Whiteman
University of Utah
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Featured researches published by C.D. Whiteman.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015
H. J. S. Fernando; Eric R. Pardyjak; S. Di Sabatino; Fotini Katopodes Chow; S. F. J. De Wekker; Sebastian W. Hoch; Josh Hacker; John Pace; Thomas G. Pratt; Zhaoxia Pu; W. J. Steenburgh; C.D. Whiteman; Y. Wang; Dragan Zajic; B. Balsley; Reneta Dimitrova; George D. Emmitt; C. W. Higgins; J. C. R. Hunt; Jason C. Knievel; Dale A. Lawrence; Yubao Liu; Daniel F. Nadeau; E. Kit; B. W. Blomquist; Patrick Conry; R. S. Coppersmith; Edward Creegan; M. Felton; Andrey A. Grachev
AbstractEmerging application areas such as air pollution in megacities, wind energy, urban security, and operation of unmanned aerial vehicles have intensified scientific and societal interest in mountain meteorology. To address scientific needs and help improve the prediction of mountain weather, the U.S. Department of Defense has funded a research effort—the Mountain Terrain Atmospheric Modeling and Observations (MATERHORN) Program—that draws the expertise of a multidisciplinary, multi-institutional, and multinational group of researchers. The program has four principal thrusts, encompassing modeling, experimental, technology, and parameterization components, directed at diagnosing model deficiencies and critical knowledge gaps, conducting experimental studies, and developing tools for model improvements. The access to the Granite Mountain Atmospheric Sciences Testbed of the U.S. Army Dugway Proving Ground, as well as to a suite of conventional and novel high-end airborne and surface measurement platfor...
Environmental Science & Technology | 2015
Holmes Ha; Sriramasamudram Jk; Eric R. Pardyjak; C.D. Whiteman
Cold air pools (CAPs) are stagnant stable air masses that form in valleys and basins in the winter. Low wintertime insolation limits convective mixing, such that pollutant concentrations can build up within the CAP when pollutant sources are present. In the western United States, wintertime CAPs often persist for days or weeks. Atmospheric models do not adequately capture the strength and evolution of CAPs. This is in part due to the limited availability of data quantifying the local turbulence during the formation, maintenance, and destruction of persistent CAPs. This paper presents observational data to quantify the turbulent mixing during two CAP episodes in Utahs Salt Lake Valley during February of 2004. Particulate matter (PM) concentration data and turbulence measurements for CAP and non-CAP time periods indicate that two distinct types of mixing scenarios occur depending on whether the CAP is dry or cloudy. Where cloudy, CAPs have enhanced vertical mixing due to top-down convection from the cloud layer. A comparison between the heat and momentum fluxes during 5 days of a dry CAP episode in February to those of an equivalent 5 day time period in March with no CAP indicates that the average turbulent kinetic energy during the CAP was suppressed by approximately 80%.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010
Bernhard Mayer; Sebastian W. Hoch; C.D. Whiteman
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017
Werner Eugster; Carmen Emmel; Sebastian Wolf; Nina Buchmann; Joseph P. McFadden; C.D. Whiteman
Archive | 2015
N. Kalthoff; Bianca Adler; Manuela Lehner; C.D. Whiteman; Sebastian W. Hoch
Archive | 2015
Bianca Adler; N. Kalthoff; C.D. Whiteman; Sebastian W. Hoch; Manuela Lehner
2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015
C.D. Whiteman
Archive | 2014
Bianca Adler; N. Kalthoff; Manuela Lehner; C.D. Whiteman; Sebastian W. Hoch; Nihanth Wagmi Cherukuru; Ronald Calhoun
Archive | 2014
Manuela Lehner; C.D. Whiteman; Sebastian W. Hoch; Nihanth Wagmi Cherukuru; Ronald Calhoun; Bianca Adler; N. Kalthoff
16th Conference on Mountain Meteorology (17-22 August, 2014) | 2014
Manuela Lehner; C.D. Whiteman; Sebastian W. Hoch; Bianca Adler; N. Kalthoff