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Wind-blown sand and dust models depend sensitively on the threshold wind stress. However, laboratory and numerical experiments suggest the coexistence of distinct fluid and impact thresholds for the initiation and cessation of aeolian saltation, respectively. Because aeolian transport models typically use only the fluid threshold, existence of a separate lower impact threshold complicates the prediction of wind-driven transport. Here, we derive the first field-based estimates of distinct fluid and impact thresholds from high-frequency saltation measurements at three field sites. Our measurements show that, when saltation is mostly inactive, its instantaneous occurrence is governed primarily by wind exceedance of the fluid threshold. As saltation activity increases, so too does the relative importance of the impact threshold, until it dominates under near-continuous transport conditions. Although both thresholds are thus important for high-frequency saltation prediction, we find that the time-averaged saltation flux is primarily governed by impact threshold.
Aeolian transport of sand and dust is driven by turbulent winds that fluctuate over a broad range of temporal and spatial scales. However, commonly used aeolian transport models do not explicitly account for such fluctuations, likely contributing to
Natural wind-eroded soils contain a mixture of particle sizes. However, models for aeolian saltation are typically derived for sediment bed surfaces containing only a single particle size. To nonetheless treat natural mixed beds, models for saltation
We conduct numerical simulations based on a model of blowing snow to reveal the long-term properties and equilibrium state of aeolian particle transport from $10^{-5} hspace{0.5 ex} mathrm{m}$ to $10 hspace{0.5 ex} mathrm{m}$ above the flat surface.
Wind-driven sand transport generates atmospheric dust, forms dunes, and sculpts landscapes. However, it remains unclear how the sand flux scales with wind speed, largely because models do not agree on how particle speed changes with wind shear veloci
Uranium and thorium are the main heat producing elements in the earth. Their quantities and distributions, which specify the flux of detectable antineutrinos generated by the beta decay of their daughter isotopes, remain unmeasured. Geological models