Derek D. Jensen
University of Utah
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Publication
Featured researches published by Derek D. Jensen.
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...
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2015
Manuela Lehner; C. David Whiteman; Sebastian W. Hoch; Derek D. Jensen; Eric R. Pardyjak; Laura S. Leo; Silvana Di Sabatino; H. J. S. Fernando
AbstractObservations were taken on an east-facing sidewall at the foot of a desert mountain that borders a large valley, as part of the Mountain Terrain Atmospheric Modeling and Observations (MATERHORN) field program at Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. A case study of nocturnal boundary layer development is presented for a night in mid-May when tethered-balloon measurements were taken to supplement other MATERHORN field measurements. The boundary layer development over the slope could be divided into three distinct phases during this night: 1) The evening transition from daytime upslope/up-valley winds to nighttime downslope winds was governed by the propagation of the shadow front. Because of the combination of complex topography at the site and the solar angle at this time of year, the shadow moved down the sidewall from approximately northwest to southeast, with the flow transition closely following the shadow front. 2) The flow transition was followed by a 3–4-h period of almost steady-state boundary la...
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2017
Jeffrey D. Massey; W. James Steenburgh; Sebastian W. Hoch; Derek D. Jensen
AbstractWeather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model simulations of the autumn 2012 and spring 2013 Mountain Terrain Atmospheric Modeling and Observations Program (MATERHORN) field campaigns are validated against observations of components of the surface energy balance (SEB) collected over contrasting desert-shrub and playa land surfaces of the Great Salt Lake Desert in northwestern Utah. Over the desert shrub, a large underprediction of sensible heat flux and an overprediction of ground heat flux occurred during the autumn campaign when the model-analyzed soil moisture was considerably higher than the measured soil moisture. Simulations that incorporate in situ measurements of soil moisture into the land surface analyses and use a modified parameterization for soil thermal conductivity greatly reduce these errors over the desert shrub but exacerbate the overprediction of latent heat flux over the playa. The Noah land surface model coupled to WRF does not capture the many unusual playa land surface proces...
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2017
Matthew E. Jeglum; Sebastian W. Hoch; Derek D. Jensen; Reneta Dimitrova; Zachariah Silver
AbstractLarge temperature fluctuations (LTFs), defined as a drop of the near-surface temperature of at least 3°C in less than 30 min followed by a recovery of at least half of the initial drop, were frequently observed during the Mountain Terrain Atmospheric Modeling and Observations (MATERHORN) program. Temperature time series at over 100 surface stations were examined in an automated fashion to identify and characterize LTFs. LTFs occur almost exclusively at night and at locations elevated 50–100 m above the basin floors, such as the east slope of the isolated Granite Mountain (GM). Temperature drops associated with LTFs were as large as 13°C and were typically greatest at heights of 4–10 m AGL. Observations and numerical simulations suggest that LTFs are the result of complex flow interactions of stably stratified flow with a mountain barrier and a leeside cold-air pool (CAP). An orographic wake forms over GM when stably stratified southwesterly nocturnal flow impinges on GM and is blocked at low level...
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2017
Derek D. Jensen; Timothy A. Price; Daniel F. Nadeau; Jacob Kingston; Eric R. Pardyjak
AbstractData collected during a multiyear, wind-resource assessment over a multi-land-use coastal environment in Belize are used to study the development and decay of wind and turbulence through the morning and evening transitions. Observations were made on three tall masts, forming an inland transect of approximately 5 km. The wind distribution is found to be bimodal and governed by synoptic scales, with onshore and offshore flow regimes. The behavior between the coastal and inland sites is found to be very similar when the flow is directed offshore; for onshore flow, stark differences occur. The mean wind speed at the coastal site is approximately 20% greater than the most inland site and is nearly constant throughout the diurnal cycle. For both flow regimes, the influence of the land–sea breeze circulation is inconsequential relative to the large-scale synoptic forcing. Composite time series are used to study the evolution of sensible heat flux and turbulence kinetic energy (TKE) throughout the morning...
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2016
Derek D. Jensen; Daniel F. Nadeau; Sebastian W. Hoch; Eric R. Pardyjak
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2016
Chaoxun Hang; Daniel F. Nadeau; Derek D. Jensen; Sebastian W. Hoch; Eric R. Pardyjak
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2017
Derek D. Jensen; Daniel F. Nadeau; Sebastian W. Hoch; Eric R. Pardyjak
21st Symposium on Boundary Layers and Turbulence | 2014
Derek D. Jensen
32nd Conf. on Agricultural and Forest Meteorology/22nd Symp. Boundary Layers and Turbulence/ Third Conf. on Atmospheric Biogeosciences (20 – 24 June, 2016) | 2016
Derek D. Jensen
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Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
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