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#1
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There have been few systematic studies of thermal structure; the work we
did in the 1970s at Reading University with an insrtumented Falke was reported at OSTIV Conferences in 78 and 81. The main focus of the research was heat and water vapour transfer from surface into the troposhere (the 'fuel' that powers the heat engine we call weather). However, it was not difficult to extract from the data some useful information of thermal structure. For the purposes of the analysis, a thermal was defined as an area of positive vertical air motion greater than 1 m/s and more that 50 metres horizontal extent. An important finding is that above about one-third of the distance to the inversion, there is no significant temperature difference between the thermal and surrounding air; near the inversion the temperature is actually lower since the warmer air above the inversion is being mixed down around the rising air. Humidity is a significant indicator, H2O molecules being lighter than O2 or N2. Therefore thermal 'detectors' based on temperature are a waste of time. It would be nice to have a remote sensor detecting movement of entrained dust particles, but this would take all the fun out of soaring. The best thermal indicator remains to be a glider flown by a good pilot circling tightly and going up fast. (Or a soaring bird). At 20:14 02 November 2014, krasw wrote: On Sunday, 2 November 2014 21:03:39 UTC+2, Andy Blackburn wrote: I'm curious what your running the numbers looks like. I admit I don't hav= e a good mental model for how thermals work from a thermodynamic and aerody= namic perspective. I thought it had something to do with the fact that warm= air was less dense and therefore buoyant. How that buoyancy accelerates a = volume of air until some form of resistance at the edges progressively resi= sts the acceleration and a steady rate of upward velocity is reached is bey= ond my understanding at a level detailed enough to relate thermal strength = to temperature differences. =20 As to the temperature gradient across the thermal - I'm not sure it's lin= ear from the edge to the center. Imagine a volume of air rising at 500 FPM.= Presumably you have some mixing at the edges but the rest of the heat tran= sfer would mostly be conductive over a period of 10 minutes before the ther= mal reaches, say, 5000'. I'm not sure what all the coefficients are, but i= t isn't 100% obvious to me that you'd end up with a linear temperature grad= ient all the way to the center of the thermal since there is so much new wa= rm air being introduced continuously from the bottom, there isn't much time= for heat to transfer to the outside air and air isn't that great a heat co= nductor in the first place. Have there been studies done? =20 9B I can't quote any sources but I bet digging into Google Scholar would resul= t studies (boundary layer physics would be good place to start). I know tha= t warm air in thermal bubble or column is little bit warmer (numbers quoted= earlier are realistic) than surround. That temperature difference is maint= ained with altitude (per hydrostatic equation), and thermal is surprisingly= "closed" system, mixing at the edge of ascending air is quite small compar= ed to thermal volume. It's true that average temperature gradient is not re= alistic figure, the gradient is probable decade higher at edge of thermal t= han figure I threw out of my sleeve. I think running constant temp difference analysis would be quite easy with = simple and cheap linux computer, temp signals going through DA conversion t= o digital domain. Sensors could be calibrated over time to match each other= , so small differences could be readable, even if absolute accuracy is some= thing like 0,1 degrees. If this has been done in 80's, technology probably = was analog electronics. Nowadays it would be more software project. |
#2
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For some reason r.a.s truncated the last letter of each line of the post
below. Mostly interpretable, but the horizontal dimension was 50 metres At 11:03 03 November 2014, Peter Purdie wrote: There have been few systematic studies of thermal structure; the work w did in the 1970s at Reading University with an insrtumented Falke wa reported at OSTIV Conferences in 78 and 81. The main focus of the researc was heat and water vapour transfer from surface into the troposhere (th 'fuel' that powers the heat engine we call weather). However, it was no difficult to extract from the data some useful information of therma structure. For the purposes of the analysis, a thermal was defined as a area of positive vertical air motion greater than 1 m/s and more that 5 metres horizontal extent. An important finding is that above abou one-third of the distance to the inversion, there is no significan temperature difference between the thermal and surrounding air; near th inversion the temperature is actually lower since the warmer air above th inversion is being mixed down around the rising air. Humidity is significant indicator, H2O molecules being lighter than O2 or N2. Therefore thermal 'detectors' based on temperature are a waste of time. I would be nice to have a remote sensor detecting movement of entrained dus particles, but this would take all the fun out of soaring. The best thermal indicator remains to be a glider flown by a good pilo circling tightly and going up fast. (Or a soaring bird). At 20:14 02 November 2014, krasw wrote: On Sunday, 2 November 2014 21:03:39 UTC+2, Andy Blackburn wrote: I'm curious what your running the numbers looks like. I admit I don't hav= e a good mental model for how thermals work from a thermodynamic and aerody= namic perspective. I thought it had something to do with the fact that warm= air was less dense and therefore buoyant. How that buoyancy accelerate a = volume of air until some form of resistance at the edges progressively resi= sts the acceleration and a steady rate of upward velocity is reached is bey= ond my understanding at a level detailed enough to relate therma strength = to temperature differences. =20 As to the temperature gradient across the thermal - I'm not sure it's lin= ear from the edge to the center. Imagine a volume of air rising at 500 FPM.= Presumably you have some mixing at the edges but the rest of the heat tran= sfer would mostly be conductive over a period of 10 minutes before the ther= mal reaches, say, 5000'. I'm not sure what all the coefficients are, but i= t isn't 100% obvious to me that you'd end up with a linear temperature grad= ient all the way to the center of the thermal since there is so much new wa= rm air being introduced continuously from the bottom, there isn't much time= for heat to transfer to the outside air and air isn't that great a heat co= nductor in the first place. Have there been studies done? =20 9B I can't quote any sources but I bet digging into Google Scholar would resul= t studies (boundary layer physics would be good place to start). I know tha= t warm air in thermal bubble or column is little bit warmer (numbers quoted= earlier are realistic) than surround. That temperature difference is maint= ained with altitude (per hydrostatic equation), and thermal is surprisingly= "closed" system, mixing at the edge of ascending air is quite small compar= ed to thermal volume. It's true that average temperature gradient is not re= alistic figure, the gradient is probable decade higher at edge of thermal t= han figure I threw out of my sleeve. I think running constant temp difference analysis would be quite eas with = simple and cheap linux computer, temp signals going through DA conversion t= o digital domain. Sensors could be calibrated over time to match each other= , so small differences could be readable, even if absolute accuracy is some= thing like 0,1 degrees. If this has been done in 80's, technolog probably = was analog electronics. Nowadays it would be more software project. |
#3
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On Monday, November 3, 2014 3:15:06 AM UTC-8, pete purdie wrote:
...An important finding is that above about one-third of the distance to the inversion, there is no significant temperature difference between the thermal and surrounding air; near the inversion the temperature is actually lower since the warmer air above the inversion is being mixed down around the rising air. Humidity is a significant indicator, H2O molecules being lighter than O2 or N2. So thermals rise, not because of the sun heating the ground and making a bubble of warm air that breaks free, but because somehow a more humid bubble of air is created. What mechanism creates the bubble of humidity? 9B |
#4
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On Monday, November 3, 2014 8:33:24 AM UTC-5, Andy Blackburn wrote:
On Monday, November 3, 2014 3:15:06 AM UTC-8, pete purdie wrote: ...An important finding is that above about one-third of the distance to the inversion, there is no significant temperature difference between the thermal and surrounding air; near the inversion the temperature is actually lower since the warmer air above the inversion is being mixed down around the rising air. Humidity is a significant indicator, H2O molecules being lighter than O2 or N2. So thermals rise, not because of the sun heating the ground and making a bubble of warm air that breaks free, but because somehow a more humid bubble of air is created. What mechanism creates the bubble of humidity? 9B Differences in ground surface condition. There is also a variation in electrical potential between thermals and surrounding air. This was explored in the 70's. UH |
#5
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On Monday, November 3, 2014 5:38:09 AM UTC-8, wrote:
There is also a variation in electrical potential between thermals and surrounding air. Enough to charge the batteries on one's FES? ;-) |
#6
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On Monday, 3 November 2014 15:33:24 UTC+2, Andy Blackburn wrote:
On Monday, November 3, 2014 3:15:06 AM UTC-8, pete purdie wrote: ...An important finding is that above about one-third of the distance to the inversion, there is no significant temperature difference between the thermal and surrounding air; near the inversion the temperature is actually lower since the warmer air above the inversion is being mixed down around the rising air. Humidity is a significant indicator, H2O molecules being lighter than O2 or N2. So thermals rise, not because of the sun heating the ground and making a bubble of warm air that breaks free, but because somehow a more humid bubble of air is created. What mechanism creates the bubble of humidity? 9B No it's differences in temperature. Humidity is transferred up to inversion layer with thermals (closed system), and air above inversion is much drier.. It's a good point however that warmer air from inversion is sucked down, so temperature sensing might be useless there. I don't see it totally useless when searching for a thermal closer to ground. Interesting topic. |
#7
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As should have been clear from what I wrote, in the bottom third of the
thermal the air is still warmer, but steadily mixing in surrounding air. Once properly formed the momentum of the tons of air moving is presumed to keep the circulation active. Air close to the ground is also more humid which increases the buoyancy. We did not fully model the mechanism, just took measurements that illustrated the scale and characteristics of meso-scale air motion in a range of situations, including convective weather. At 13:33 03 November 2014, Andy Blackburn wrote: On Monday, November 3, 2014 3:15:06 AM UTC-8, pete purdie wrote: ...An important finding is that above about one-third of the distance to the inversion, there is no significant temperature difference between the thermal and surrounding air; near the inversion the temperature is actually lower since the warmer air above the inversion is being mixed down around the rising air. Humidity is a significant indicator, H2O molecules being lighter than O2 or N2. So thermals rise, not because of the sun heating the ground and making a bubble of warm air that breaks free, but because somehow a more humid bubble of air is created. What mechanism creates the bubble of humidity? 9B |
#8
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On Monday, November 3, 2014 6:15:05 AM UTC-8, pete purdie wrote:
Once properly formed the momentum of the tons of air moving is presumed to keep the circulation active. Not entirely sure I buy momentum as a first-order effect since blue thermals don't typically overrun the top of the invasion level by very much, so I can't imagine the top 2/3 of the thermal is simply momentum. Also, if it's thoroughly mixed from a temperature perspective wouldn't it also be mixed from a humidity perspective as well so it wouldn't be rising from having higher humidity either? Curious. 9B |
#9
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Like I said, we didn't attempt to fully model the
mechanism. Richard Feynmen: 'If the measurements don't agree with the theory, then the theory is probably wrong. If they do, the theory might be right.' At 14:38 03 November 2014, Andy Blackburn wrote: On Monday, November 3, 2014 6:15:05 AM UTC-8, pete purdie wrote: Once properly formed the momentum of the tons of air moving is presumed t= o keep the circulation active. =20 Not entirely sure I buy momentum as a first-order effect since blue thermal= s don't typically overrun the top of the invasion level by very much, so I = can't imagine the top 2/3 of the thermal is simply momentum. Also, if it's = thoroughly mixed from a temperature perspective wouldn't it also be mixed f= rom a humidity perspective as well so it wouldn't be rising from having hig= her humidity either? Curious. 9B |
#10
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OK btt..
The S80 arrived after some desperate 6 month delay last week and went directly into the ship. Flying with it the first time yesterday 3.5 hours showed exelent performance. Great visibility even with sunshine and blue sky. I like the fast response without any sign of being nerveous. Even with response times of just 1.5s.. The big and bright display could be noticed without even having my eyes pointing to the dashboard. Software ins not at the feature level of the V7 yet but will be soon as the developer promised. So thumbs up for now! P. |
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