Ian N. Harman
CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ian N. Harman.
Ecological Applications | 2008
Stephen E. Belcher; John J. Finnigan; Ian N. Harman
Recent progress on boundary layer flow within and above tall forest canopies in complex terrain is reviewed from the perspective of developing methods to interpret carbon dioxide fluxes from tower measurements in real terrain. Two examples of complex terrain are considered in detail: a forest edge, which exemplifies nonuniform forests, and hilly terrain, which can lead to drainage currents at night. Dynamical arguments show that, when boundary layer winds approach a forest edge, the mean wind adjusts on a length scale of approximately 3L(c), where L(c) is the canopy drag length scale, which depends inversely on the leaf area density of the forest. Over a further distance that also scales on L(c), turbulence in the flow adjusts, and the mixing and transport in the canopy approaches the homogeneous limit. Even low hills change the neutral flow within and above the forest canopy substantially. When the canopy is tall, pressure gradients drive flow up both the upwind and downwind slopes of the hill, leading to an ejection of air out of the top of the canopy just downwind of the crest. This flow at the crest can then advect scalar out of the top of the forest, leading to large variations in the flux of scalar across the hill. At night, when the air near the ground cools and becomes stably stratified, turbulence within the canopy can collapse, even when the flow above the canopy remains turbulent. This leads to a decoupling of the air motions within the canopy from those above. The air above the canopy can then continue to pass up and over the hill, as it does in the neutral case, but at the same time, air within the canopy drains down the hill slopes as drainage currents. These analyses will help us understand when flux towers are reliably measuring the net ecosystem exchange and suggest ways of correcting the flux tower data in more complex situations.
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2004
Ian N. Harman; M. J. Best; Stephen E. Belcher
The influence of building geometry on the radiation terms ofthe surface energy balance is a principal reason for surfacetemperature differences between rural and urban areas.Methods exist to calculate the radiation balance in an urban area,but their validity across the range of urban geometries andmaterials has not been carefully considered.Here the exchange of diffuse radiation in an urban street canyon isinvestigated using a method incorporating all reflections of radiation.This exact solution is compared to two commonly used approximationsthat retain either no reflections, or just one reflection of radiation.The area-averaged net radiative flux density from the facets of the canyondecreases in magnitude monotonically as the canyon aspect ratio increases.The two approximate solutions possess unphysical differences from thismonotonic decrease for high canyon aspect ratios or low materialemissivities/high material albedos.The errors of the two approximate solutions are small for near blackbodymaterials and small canyon aspect ratios but can be an order ofmagnitude for intermediate material properties and deep street canyons.Urban street canyon models need to consider at least one reflectionof radiation and multiple reflections are desirable for full applicability.
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2007
Ian N. Harman; John J. Finnigan
Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics | 2012
Stephen E. Belcher; Ian N. Harman; John Finnigan
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2004
Janet F. Barlow; Ian N. Harman; Stephen E. Belcher
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2004
Ian N. Harman; Janet F. Barlow; Stephen E. Belcher
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2006
Ian N. Harman; Stephen E. Belcher
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2008
Ian N. Harman; John J. Finnigan
Earth System Dynamics Discussions | 2013
Mda Rounsevell; Almut Arneth; Peter Alexander; Daniel G. Brown; N. de Noblet-Ducoudré; Erle C. Ellis; John J. Finnigan; Kathleen A. Galvin; Nicky Grigg; Ian N. Harman; James Lennox; Nicholas R. Magliocca; Dawn C. Parker; Brian C. O'Neill; Peter H. Verburg; O Young
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2014
Brett A. Bryan; Martin Nolan; Tom Harwood; Jeffery D. Connor; J. Navarro-Garcia; Darran King; David Summers; David Newth; Yiyong Cai; Nicky Grigg; Ian N. Harman; Neville D. Crossman; Mike Grundy; John J. Finnigan; Simon Ferrier; Kristen J. Williams; Kerrie A. Wilson; Elizabeth A. Law; Steve Hatfield-Dodds
Collaboration
Dive into the Ian N. Harman's collaboration.
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
View shared research outputsCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
View shared research outputsCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
View shared research outputsCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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