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Teoría de Similitud de Monin-Obukhov×Flujo Aerodinámico Global×Eddy Covariance×Viento Térmico×
CampoMeteorologíaMeteorologíaMeteorologíaMeteorología
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen1954198119511920s
Autor originalMonin and ObukhovLarge and PondSwinbankJacobbian insights from geostrophic flow
TipoSimilarity scaling frameworkSurface flux estimation methodMicrometeorological flux measurementWind-temperature relationship
Fuente seminalMonin, A. S., & Obukhov, A. M. (1954). Basic laws of turbulent mixing in the ground layer of the atmosphere. Tr. Akad. Nauk SSSR, 24, 163-187. link ↗Large, W. G., & Pond, S. (1981). Open ocean momentum flux measurements in moderate to strong winds. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 11(3), 324-336. DOI ↗Baldocchi, D. (2003). Assessing the eddy covariance technique for evaluating carbon dioxide fluxes of ecosystems: past, present and future. Global Change Biology, 9(4), 479-492. DOI ↗Holton, J. R. (2004). An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology (4th ed.). Academic Press. link ↗
AliasMonin-Obukhov, Similarity theory, Monin-Obukhov length scaleBulk aerodynamic approach, Bulk flux parametrization, Aerodynamic bulk methodEddy covariance, EC flux, Eddy correlation, Direct flux measurementThermal wind, Vertical wind shear, Barotropic
Relacionados3333
ResumenMonin-Obukhov similarity theory is a fundamental framework in boundary layer meteorology that describes how wind speed, temperature, and humidity vary with height near the surface. Published in 1954, it shows that normalized vertical profiles depend on a single dimensionless parameter—the Monin-Obukhov stability parameter—which quantifies the balance between mechanical turbulence and buoyant convection.The bulk aerodynamic method estimates surface energy and momentum fluxes from standard meteorological observations. Rather than measuring turbulent fluxes directly, it parameterizes them using measurements of wind speed, temperature, and moisture at a reference height (typically 10 m) and surface conditions, multiplied by empirically derived drag and transfer coefficients.The eddy covariance method is a direct, micrometeorological technique that measures turbulent fluxes of momentum, heat, water vapor, and CO2 by computing the covariance between high-frequency fluctuations of wind velocity and scalar properties (temperature, humidity, concentration). It is the gold standard for measuring ecosystem-atmosphere exchanges and validating model parameterizations.The thermal wind relationship is a fundamental meteorological principle that links vertical wind shear to horizontal temperature gradients. It states that wind speed increases with height in the direction of warming—a direct consequence of hydrostatic and geostrophic balance combined with the ideal gas law.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Monin-Obukhov Similarity · Bulk Aerodynamic Flux · Eddy Covariance · Thermal Wind. Recuperado el 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare