Crop and Soil Science > Research > Biomicrometeorology

Biomicrometeorology


The faculty in Biomicrometeorology conducts research on the transport of gases to and from vegetation, and on the transport of gases, energy and heat inside vegetation canopies. Diffusion of gases such as carbon dioxide, water, and sulfur dioxide is regulated by both source/sink strengths of those gases and also to a large degree by the structure of the turbulent flow present within the vegetation canopy. The faculty in Biomicrometeorology has been using a combination of field micrometeorological measurements and modeling to describe the turbulent exchange and the gaseous diffusion in the vegetation environment. The research group uses Langrangian modeling and Large-Eddy Simulation.

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