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Dive into the research topics where Jielun Sun is active.

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Featured researches published by Jielun Sun.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2002

CASES-99: A Comprehensive Investigation of the Stable Nocturnal Boundary Layer

Gregory S. Poulos; William Blumen; David C. Fritts; Julie K. Lundquist; Jielun Sun; Sean P. Burns; Carmen J. Nappo; Robert M. Banta; Rob K. Newsom; Joan Cuxart; Enric Terradellas; Ben B. Balsley; Michael L. Jensen

Abstract The Cooperative Atmosphere-Surface Exchange Study—1999 (CASES-99) refers to a field experiment carried out in southeast Kansas during October 1999 and the subsequent program of investigation. Comprehensive data, primarily taken during the nighttime but typically including the evening and morning transition, supports data analyses, theoretical studies, and state-of-the-art numerical modeling in a concerted effort by participants to investigate four areas of scientific interest. The choice of these scientific topics is motivated by both the need to delineate physical processes that characterize the stable boundary layer, which are as yet not clearly understood, and the specific scientific goals of the investigators. Each of the scientific goals should be largely achievable with the measurements taken, as is shown with preliminary analysis within the scope of three of the four scientific goals. Underlying this effort is the fundamental motivation to eliminate deficiencies in surface layer and turbul...


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2001

SHALLOW DRAINAGE FLOWS

Larry Mahrt; Dean Vickers; Reina Nakamura; M. R. Soler; Jielun Sun; Sean P. Burns; Donald H. Lenschow

Two-dimensional sonic anemometers and slowresponse thermistors were deployedacross a shallow gully during CASES99. Weak gully flow of a few tenths of m s-1 anda depth of a few metres develops in the earlyevening on most nights with clear skies.Flow down the gully developed sometimes evenwhen the opposing ambient wind exceeded10 m s-1 at the top of the60–m tower. Cold air drainage fromlarger-scale slopes flows over the top ofthe colder gully flow. The gully flowand other drainage flows are generally eliminated in the middle of the night in conjunctionwith flow acceleration abovethe surface inversion layer and downwardmixing of warmer air and highermomentum. As the flow decelerates later inthe night, the gully flow may re-form.The thin drainage flows decouple standard observational levels of3–10 m from the surface.Under such common conditions, eddy correlationflux measurements cannot be used toestimate surface fluxes nor even detect thethin gully and drainage flows. The gentlegully system in this field program is typical ofmuch of the Earth’s land surface.


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2004

Atmospheric disturbances that generate intermittent turbulence in nocturnal boundary layers

Jielun Sun; Donald H. Lenschow; Sean P. Burns; Robert M. Banta; Rob K. Newsom; Richard L. Coulter; Stephen J. Frasier; Turker Ince; Carmen J. Nappo; Ben B. Balsley; Michael L. Jensen; Larry Mahrt; David R. Miller; Brian T. Skelly

Using the unprecedented observational facilities deployed duringthe 1999 Cooperative Atmosphere-Surface Exchange Study (CASES-99),we found three distinct turbulent events on the night of 18October 1999. These events resulted from a density current,solitary wave, and internal gravity wave, respectively. Our studyfocuses on the turbulence intermittency generated by the solitarywave and internal gravity wave, and intermittent turbulenceepisodes associated with pressure change and wind direction shiftsadjacent to the ground. Both the solitary and internal gravitywaves propagated horizontally and downward. During the passage ofboth the solitary and internal gravity waves, local thermal andshear instabilities were generated as cold air was pushed abovewarm air and wind gusts reached to the ground. These thermal andshear instabilities triggered turbulent mixing events. Inaddition, strong vertical acceleration associated with thesolitary wave led to large non-hydrostatic pressure perturbationsthat were positively correlated with temperature. The directionaldifference between the propagation of the internal gravity waveand the ambient flow led to lateral rolls. These episodic studiesdemonstrate that non-local disturbances are responsible for localthermal and shear instabilities, leading to intermittentturbulence in nocturnal boundary layers. The origin of thesenon-local disturbances needs to be understood to improve mesoscalenumerical model performance.


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2002

Intermittent Turbulence Associated with a Density Current Passage in the Stable Boundary Layer

Jielun Sun; Sean P. Burns; Donald H. Lenschow; Robert M. Banta; Rob K. Newsom; Richard L. Coulter; Stephen J. Frasier; Turker Ince; Carmen J. Nappo; Joan Cuxart; William Blumen; Xuhui Lee; Xinzhang Hu

Using the unprecedented observational capabilities deployed duringthe Cooperative Atmosphere-Surface Exchange Study-99 (CASES-99),we found three distinct turbulence events on the night of 18October 1999, each of which was associated with differentphenomena: a density current, solitary waves, and downwardpropagating waves from a low-level jet. In this study, we focus onthe first event, the density current and its associatedintermittent turbulence. As the cold density current propagatedthrough the CASES-99 site, eddy motions in the upper part of thedensity current led to periodic overturning of the stratifiedflow, local thermal instability and a downward diffusion ofturbulent mixing. Propagation of the density current induced asecondary circulation. The descending motion following the head ofthe density current resulted in strong stratification, a sharpreduction in the turbulence, and a sudden increase in the windspeed. As the wind surge propagated toward the surface, shearinstability generated upward diffusion of turbulent mixing. Wedemonstrate in detail that the height and sequence of the localthermal and shear instabilities associated with the dynamics ofthe density current are responsible for the apparent intermittentturbulence.


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 1999

Surface-layer fluxes in stable conditions

J. F. Howell; Jielun Sun

Micrometeorological tower data from the Microfronts experiment are analyzed. Scale-dependencies of the flux and flux sampling error are combined to automatically determine Reynolds turbulence cut-off time scales for computing fluxes from time series. The computed downward heat flux at the 3 m height averaged over nine nights with 7.3 hours each night is 20% greater than the downward heat flux computed at the 10 m height. In contrast, there is only a 1.2% difference between 3 m and 10 m heat fluxes averaged over daytime periods, and there is less than a 2% difference between 3 m and 10 m momentum fluxes whether averaged over nighttime or daytime periods.Stability functions, φM(z/L) and φH(z/L) are extended to z/L up to 10, where z is the observational height and L is the Obukhov length. For 0.01 < z/L < 1 the estimated φ functions generally agree with Businger-Dyer formulations, though the φH estimates include more scatter compared to the φM estimates. For 1 < z/L < 10, the flux intermittency increases, the flux Richardson number exceeds 0.2, and the number of flux samples decreases. Nonetheless the estimates of the stability function φM based on 3-m fluxes are closer to the formula proposed by Beljaars and Holtslag in 1991 while the φM functions based on 10-m fluxes appears to be closer to the formula proposed by Businger et al. in 1971. The stability function φH levels off at z/L = 0.5.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2007

The Coupled Boundary Layers and Air–Sea Transfer Experiment in Low Winds

James B. Edson; Timothy L. Crawford; Jerry Crescenti; Tom Farrar; Nelson M. Frew; Greg Gerbi; C. G. Helmis; Tihomir Hristov; Djamal Khelif; Andrew T. Jessup; Haf Jonsson; Ming Li; Larry Mahrt; Wade R. McGillis; Albert J. Plueddemann; Lian Shen; Eric D. Skyllingstad; Timothy P. Stanton; Peter P. Sullivan; Jielun Sun; John H. Trowbridge; Dean Vickers; Shouping Wang; Qing Wang; Robert A. Weller; John Wilkin; Albert J. Williams; Dick K. P. Yue; Christopher J. Zappa

The Office of Naval Researchs Coupled Boundary Layers and Air–Sea Transfer (CBLAST) program is being conducted to investigate the processes that couple the marine boundary layers and govern the exchange of heat, mass, and momentum across the air–sea interface. CBLAST-LOW was designed to investigate these processes at the low-wind extreme where the processes are often driven or strongly modulated by buoyant forcing. The focus was on conditions ranging from negligible wind stress, where buoyant forcing dominates, up to wind speeds where wave breaking and Langmuir circulations play a significant role in the exchange processes. The field program provided observations from a suite of platforms deployed in the coastal ocean south of Marthas Vineyard. Highlights from the measurement campaigns include direct measurement of the momentum and heat fluxes on both sides of the air–sea interface using a specially constructed Air–Sea Interaction Tower (ASIT), and quantification of regional oceanic variability over sca...


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2012

Turbulence Regimes and Turbulence Intermittency in the Stable Boundary Layer during CASES-99

Jielun Sun; Larry Mahrt; Robert M. Banta; Yelena L. Pichugina

AbstractAn investigation of nocturnal intermittent turbulence during the Cooperative Atmosphere–Surface Exchange Study in 1999 (CASES-99) revealed three turbulence regimes at each observation height: 1) regime 1, a weak turbulence regime when the wind speed is less than a threshold value; 2) regime 2, a strong turbulence regime when the wind speed exceeds the threshold value; and 3) regime 3, a moderate turbulence regime when top-down turbulence sporadically bursts into the otherwise weak turbulence regime. For regime 1, the strength of small turbulence eddies is correlated with local shear and weakly related to local stratification. For regime 2, the turbulence strength increases systematically with wind speed as a result of turbulence generation by the bulk shear, which scales with the observation height. The threshold wind speed marks the transition above which the boundary layer approaches near-neutral conditions, where the turbulent mixing substantially reduces the stratification and temperature fluc...


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 1994

Observations of Fluxes and Inland Breezes over a Heterogeneous Surface

L. Mahrt; Jielun Sun; Dean Vickers; J. I. Macpherson; J. R. Pederson; R. L. Desjardins

Abstract Repeated aircraft runs at about 33 m over heterogeneous terrain are analyzed to study the spatial variability of the mesoscale flow and turbulent fluxes. An irrigated area, about 12 km across, generates a relatively cool moist inland breeze. As this air flows out over the warmer, drier surrounding land surface, an internal boundary layer develops within the inland breeze, which then terminates at a well-defined inland breeze front located about 1½ km downstream from the change of surface conditions. This front is defined by horizontal convergence, rising motion, and sharp spatial change of moisture, carbon dioxide, and ozone. Both a scale analysis and the observations suggest that the overall vertical motion associated with the inland breeze is weak. However, the observations indicate that this vertical motion and attendant vertical transport are important in the immediate vicinity of the front, and the inland breeze does lead to significant modification of the turbulent flux. In the inland breez...


Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2004

Ocean Wave Slope Observations Using Radar Backscatter and Laser Altimeters

Douglas Vandemark; Bertrand Chapron; Jielun Sun; G. H. Crescenti; Hans C. Graber

Abstract Combination of laser and radar aboard an aircraft is used to directly measure long gravity wave surface tilting simultaneously with nadir-viewing microwave backscatter from the sea surface. The presented dataset is extensive, encompassing varied wind conditions over coastal and open-ocean wave regimes. Laser-derived slope statistics and Ka-band (36 GHz) radar backscatter are detailed separately to document their respective variations versus near-surface wind speed. The slope statistics, measured for λ > 1–2 m, show good agreement with Cox and Munks oil-slickened sea measurements. A notable exception is elevated distribution peakedness and an observed wind dependence in this likely proxy for nonlinear wave–wave interactions. Aircraft Ka-band radar data nearly mimic Ku-band satellite altimeter observations in their mean wind dependence. The present calibrated radar data, along with relevant observational and theoretical studies, suggest a large (−5 dB) bias in previous Ka-band results. Next, wave-...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1998

Transport of carbon dioxide, water vapor, and ozone by turbulence and local circulations

Jielun Sun; Raymond L. Desjardins; Larry Mahrt; Ian MacPherson

Nocturnal land breezes and daytime lake breezes are studied using data collected by the Canadian Twin Otter aircraft and a deck boat which traversed Candle Lake during the Boreal Ecosystem-Atmosphere Study (BOREAS). The nocturnal vertical transport of CO2, water vapor, and ozone over the lake consists of two parts: (1) mesoscale rising motion associated with land breeze convergence and (2) significant turbulence and vertical mixing driven by buoyancy in the lower part of the internal boundary layer and shear generation in the top part of the internal boundary layer. For comparison, the role of the lake in the daytime is examined in terms of formation of a stable internal boundary layer due to advection of warm air from land with small CO2 concentration over the cooler lake surface. Analysis of the aircraft and boat data indicates that the nocturnal land breeze plays an important role in the regional CO2 budget in the lake region. In the present study, CO2 is advected horizontally by a nocturnal land breeze circulation and vented vertically over Candle Lake (“chimney effect”). Such near-surface horizontal transport implies that part of the respirated CO2 never reaches the tower observational level, particularly under light wind conditions. This study speculates that preferred locations of vertical venting of CO2 may also occur due to convergence of nocturnal drainage circulations or flow meandering, although probably weaker than that associated with the land breeze. These circulations partly explain recent findings that tower-measured nocturnal turbulent fluxes of CO2 above the canopy and the subcanopy storage of CO2 frequently sum to less than the total respiration of CO2, leading to “missing CO2.” Unfortunately, the present study does not allow evaluation of all of the terms in the carbon dioxide budget.

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Larry Mahrt

Oregon State University

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Donald H. Lenschow

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Sean P. Burns

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Steven P. Oncley

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Dean Vickers

Oregon State University

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Britton B. Stephens

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Carmen J. Nappo

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Dean E. Anderson

United States Geological Survey

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Timothy L. Crawford

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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