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  • A tribute to Michael R. Raupach for contributions to aeolian fluid dynamics

    Author(s)
    Shao, Yaping
    Nickling, William
    Bergametti, Gilles
    Butler, Harry
    Chappell, Adrian
    Findlater, Paul
    Gillies, John
    Ishizuka, Masahide
    Klose, Martina
    Kok, Jasper F
    Leys, John
    Lu, Hua
    Marticorena, Beatrice
    McTainsh, Grant
    McKenna-Neuman, Cheryl
    Okin, Gregory S
    Strong, Craig
    Webb, Nicholas
    Griffith University Author(s)
    McTainsh, Grant H.
    Year published
    2015
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Since the pioneering work of Bagnold in the 1940s, aeolian research has grown to become an integral part of earth-system science. Many individuals have contributed to this development, and Dr. Michael R. Raupach (1950–2015) has played a pivotal role. Raupach worked intensively on wind erosion problems for about a decade (1985–1995), during which time he applied his deep knowledge of turbulence to aeolian research problems and made profound contributions with far-reaching impact. The beauty of Raupach’s work lies in his clear conceptual thinking and his ability to reduce complex problems to their bare essentials. The results ...
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    Since the pioneering work of Bagnold in the 1940s, aeolian research has grown to become an integral part of earth-system science. Many individuals have contributed to this development, and Dr. Michael R. Raupach (1950–2015) has played a pivotal role. Raupach worked intensively on wind erosion problems for about a decade (1985–1995), during which time he applied his deep knowledge of turbulence to aeolian research problems and made profound contributions with far-reaching impact. The beauty of Raupach’s work lies in his clear conceptual thinking and his ability to reduce complex problems to their bare essentials. The results of his work are fundamentally important and have many practical applications. In this review we reflect on Raupach’s contribution to a number of important aspects of aeolian research, summarise developments since his inspirational work and place Raupach’s efforts in the context of aeolian science. We also demonstrate how Raupach’s work provided a foundation for new developments in aeolian research. In this tribute, we concentrate on five areas of research: (1) drag partition theory; (2) saltation roughness length; (3) saltation bombardment; (4) threshold friction velocity and (5) the carbon cycle.
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    Journal Title
    Aeolian Research
    Volume
    19
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aeolia.2015.09.004
    Subject
    Earth sciences
    Other earth sciences not elsewhere classified
    Environmental sciences
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/141344
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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