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Response of The Land-atmosphere System Over North-central Oklahoma During The 2017 Eclipse

Abstract

On 21 August 2017, a solar eclipse occurred over the continental United States resulting in a rapid reduction and subsequent increase of solar radiation over a large region of the country. The eclipse's effect on the land-atmosphere system is documented in unprecedented detail using a unique array of sensors deployed at three sites in north-central Oklahoma. The observations showed that turbulent fluxes of heat and momentum at the surface responded quickly to the change in solar radiation. The decrease in the sensible heat flux resulted in a decrease in the air temperature below 200 m, and a large decrease in turbulent motions throughout the boundary layer. Furthermore, the turbulent mixing in the boundary layer lagged behind the change in the surface fluxes, and this lag depended on the height above the surface. The turbulent motions increased and the convective boundary layer was reestablished as the sensible heat flux recovered.

Article / Publication Data
Active/Online
YES
Volume
45
Available Metadata
Accepted On
January 19, 2018
DOI ↗
Fiscal Year
NOAA IR URL ↗
Peer Reviewed
YES
Publication Name
Geophysical Research Letters
Published On
February 16, 2018
Publisher Name
American Geophysical Union
Print Volume
45
Print Number
3
Page Range
1668–1675
Issue
3
Submitted On
October 14, 2017
URL ↗

Author

Authors who have authored or contributed to this publication.