Event detection and conditional averaging in unsteady
aeolian systems
Bernard O. Bauer*, Jianchun Yi, Steven L. Namikas &
Douglas J. Sherman
Department of Geography, University of Southern California, Los Angeles,
CA 90089-0255, U.S.A.
( Received 8 December 1997, accepted 2 February 1998)
Traditional models of sediment flux ignore wind unsteadiness, and there are
sound empirical and theoretical arguments that implicate this deficiency as
being fundamental to explaining their limited predictive abilities. Drawing on
concepts and theories from the fluid mechanics literature on turbulent
boundary layers, and with the implementation of fast-response instrumenta-
tion (hot-film anemometers and continuously-weighing sand traps) this study
begins to address a series of inter-related questions regarding the character of
wind and transport events. Foremost among these is whether an event-based
analysis of wind speed time series bears close resemblance to sediment flux
events.
The research demonstrates that fluid ‘ejection’ events identified by the
Variable-Interval Time Averaging (VITA) method are only crudely associated
with those identified using the quadrant-threshold method. Moreover, VITA
events show poor correspondence with sediment flux events. The reasons for
this are unclear, although it is likely that the character of events in this beach
boundary layer differ substantively from the character of structural events
typically associated with the sublayer bursting process. Additional unresolved
issues include whether the inner/outer layer model applies to the grain-laden/
grain-free zones of a saltation system, and whether the structural events
evident in velocity time series from wind tunnels and natural beaches are
analogous. Event-detection and conditional-averaging techniques hold prom-
ise for characterizing the fundamental nature of unsteadiness in aeolian
systems.
©1998 Academic Press Limited
Keywords: aeolian transport; wind unsteadiness; turbulent structures;
bursting; VITA method
Introduction
Modeling the effect of flow unsteadiness on sediment transport remains a fundamental
research challenge for aeolian geomorphology. Even though wind gustiness and
*E-mail: bbauer@nsf.gov
Journal of Arid Environments (1998) 39: 345–375
Article No. ae980380
0140–1963/98/030345 + 31 $25.00/0 © 1998 Academic Press Limited