Atmospheric and Oceanographic Sciences Library, vol. 29. Kluwer Academic Publishers, New York, 2004, 164 pp. - ISBN: 1-4020-2264-6
Micrometeorology is a branch of meteorology that is concerned with atmospheric phenomena and processes near the ground at scales of tens of meters to several kilometers. Progress in micrometeorology is made through experimental investigation of these phenomena and quantitative study attempting to bring order to experimental data. Studies of surfaceair flux play a crucial role in this endeavor.
Contributing Authors.
Introduction (Beverly Law, Shashi Verma).
Averaging, Detrending, and Filtering of Eddy Covariance. Time Series (John Moncrieff, Robert Clement, John Finnigan, Tilden Meyers).
Coordinate Systems and Flux Bias Error (Xuhui Lee, John Finnigan, Kyaw Tha Paw U).
Uncertainty in Eddy Covariance Flux Estimates. Resulting from Spectral Attenuation (William Massman, Robert Clement).
Flux Measurements (Yadvinder Malhi, Keith McNaughton, Celso Von Randow).
Measurements of Trace Gas Fluxes in the Atmosphere Using Eddy Covariance: WPL Corrections. Revisited (Ray Leuning).
Concerning the Measurement of Atmospheric Trace Gas Fluxes with Open- and Closed-path Eddy Covariance System: The WPL Terms and Spectral Attenuation (William Massman).
Stationarity, Homogeneity, and Ergodicity in Canopy Turbulence (Gabriel Katul, Daniela Cava, Davide Poggi, John Albertson, Larry Mahrt).
Post-field Data Quality Control (Thomas Foken, Mathias G.ckede, Matthias Mauder, Larry Mahrt, Brian Amiro, William Munger).
Advection and Modeling (John Finnigan).