Nomenclature: Difference between revisions

From Atomix
Line 14: Line 14:
** <math>\Psi_{variable}</math> for model/theoretical spectrum of variable e.g., du/dx or u
** <math>\Psi_{variable}</math> for model/theoretical spectrum of variable e.g., du/dx or u
** <math>\Phi_{variable}</math> for observed spectrum of variable e.g., du/dx or u
** <math>\Phi_{variable}</math> for observed spectrum of variable e.g., du/dx or u
* Lowest frequency and wavenumber resolvable  
* Lowest frequency and wavenumber resolvable
 
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|- Style="font-weight:bold; "
|- Style="font-weight:bold; "
Line 44: Line 45:
| <math>f_s</math>
| <math>f_s</math>
| Sampling frequency
| Sampling frequency
| <math> \frac{1}{\Delta t} </math>
| <math>f_s=\frac{1}{\Delta t} </math>
| Hz
| Hz
|-
|-

Revision as of 13:39, 16 March 2021

Frame of reference

  • Define frame of reference, and notation. Use u,v,w and x,y, and z?
  • Decomposition of total, mean, turbulent and waves.


Turbulence Spectrum

Taylor's Frozen Turbulence for converting temporal to spatial measurements (u¯1x=t)


  • Missing the y-axi variable. CEB proposes:
    • Ψvariable for model/theoretical spectrum of variable e.g., du/dx or u
    • Φvariable for observed spectrum of variable e.g., du/dx or u
  • Lowest frequency and wavenumber resolvable
Symbol Description Eqn Units
Δt Sampling interval 1fs s
Δl Sampling volume dimension m
f Frequency ω2π Hz
fn Nyquist frequency fn=0.5fs Hz
fs Sampling frequency fs=1Δt Hz
k Wavenumbers (angular) k=fu¯=2πk^ rad/m
k^ Wavenumbers k2π cpm
k^Δ Nyquist wavenumber, based on sampling volume's size Δl k^Δ=0.5Δl cpm
k^n Nyquist wavenumber, via Taylor's hypothesis (temporal measurements) k^n=fnu cpm
ω Angular frequency 2πf rad/s

Theoretical Length and Time Scales

Symbol Description Eqn Units
ϵ Turbulent kinetic energy dissipation W/kg
ν Viscosity of water for seawater at 35psu and 20 oC 1×106 m2/s
N Buoyancy frequency N=gρ¯ρ¯z rad/s
η Kolmogorov length scale (smallest overturns) η=(ν3ϵ)1/4=12πk^K m [per rad?]
Lo Ozmidov length scale, measure of largest overturns in a stratified fluid Lo=(ϵN3)1/2 m [per rad?]

Test