Перейти к основному содержанию
AkademIndex

Продукты

Для разработчиков

AkademBaseОткрытый API экосистемы
Статья

The equations of motion for moist atmospheric air

Anastassia M. MakarievaTheoretical Physics Division Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute St. Petersburg RussiaV. G. GorshkovTheoretical Physics Division Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute St. Petersburg RussiaA. V. NefiodovTheoretical Physics Division Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute St. Petersburg RussiaDouglas SheilFaculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences Ås NorwayAntonio Donato NobreCentro de Ciência do Sistema Terrestre INPE, São José dos Campos São Paulo BrazilPeter BunyardLawellen Farm, Withiel Bodmin UKPaulo NobreCenter for Weather Forecast and Climate Studies INPE, São José dos Campos São Paulo BrazilBai‐Lian LiUSDA‐China MOST Joint Research Center for AgroEcology and Sustainability University of California Riverside California USA
ABI

Аннотация

Abstract How phase transitions affect the motion of moist atmospheric air remains controversial. In the early 2000s two distinct differential equations of motion were proposed. Besides their contrasting formulations for the acceleration of condensate, the equations differ concerning the presence/absence of a term equal to the rate of phase transitions multiplied by the difference in velocity between condensate and air. This term was interpreted in the literature as the “reactive motion” associated with condensation. The reasoning behind this reactive motion was that when water vapor condenses and droplets begin to fall the remaining gas must move upward to conserve momentum. Here we show that the two contrasting formulations imply distinct assumptions about how gaseous air and condensate particles interact. We show that these assumptions cannot be simultaneously applicable to condensation and evaporation. Reactive motion leading to an upward acceleration of air during condensation does not exist. The reactive motion term can be justified for evaporation only; it describes the downward acceleration of air. We emphasize the difference between the equations of motion (i.e., equations constraining velocity) and those constraining momentum (i.e., equations of motion and continuity combined). We show that owing to the imprecise nature of the continuity equations, consideration of total momentum can be misleading and that this led to the reactive motion controversy. Finally, we provide a revised and generally applicable equation for the motion of moist air.

Перевод пока недоступен

Темы

Идентификаторы

Цитирования и источники

Показатели — AkademScholar · Скоро