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Revealing the Dynamical Transition of Anisotropy behind the HOST by Koopman Analysis
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  • Licheng Li,
  • Hongchao ZUO,
  • Bolong Chen,
  • Yang Guo,
  • Mengmeng Ma,
  • Longxiang Dong,
  • Licheng Li
Licheng Li
College of Atmospheric science, Lanzhou University
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Hongchao ZUO
Lanzhou University, Lanzhou University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Bolong Chen
Lanzhou University, Lanzhou University
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Yang Guo
Tianjin Meteorological Information Center, Tianjin Meteorological Information Center
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Mengmeng Ma
College of Atmospheric Science, Lanzhou University, College of Atmospheric Science, Lanzhou University
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Longxiang Dong
Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resource, CAS, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resource, CAS
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Licheng Li
Lanzhou University
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Abstract

The hockey-stick transition (HOST), which is depicted by the ‘local and global shear’ assumption, about the turbulence kinetic energy with the averaged flow intensity is noticed widely. However, the intrinsic mechanism of averaged flow influences turbulence kinetic energy via shear and buoyancy is missing. In this research, we deploy the Koopman operator to expose invariant subspaces of the Ri series to identify the quasi-periodic coherent structures from the single tower observation. Analysis of turbulence fluxes and anisotropy demonstrates the mechanism, i.e. horizontal kinetic energy coupled with vertical downward flux, whereby anisotropy evolution is changed. Examining the anisotropy invariants changing with kinetic energy reveals a dynamical transition that determines the threshold of HOST. Moreover, the mechanism about how the shear and vertical momentum influences the transition point of HOST is at first given by a group of a quadratic relationship when the anisotropy crossed over the transition point
16 Dec 2020Published in Geophysical Research Letters volume 47 issue 23. 10.1029/2020GL091123