We use a novel experimental setup to obtain the vertical velocity and acceleration statistics of snowflakes settling in atmospheric surface-layer turbulence, for Taylor microscale Reynolds numbers ( ) between 400 and 67 000, Stokes numbers (St) between 0.12 and 3.50, and a broad range of snowflake habits. Despite the complexity of snowflake structures and the non-uniform nature of the turbulence, we find that mean snowflake acceleration distributions can be uniquely determined from the value of St. Ensemble-averaged snowflake root mean square (rms) accelerations scale nearly linearly with St. Normalized by the rms value, the acceleration distribution is nearly exponential, with a scaling factor for the (exponent) of −3/2 that is independent of and St; kurtosis scales with , albeit weakly compared to fluid tracers in turbulence; gravitational drift with sweeping is observed for St < 1. Surprisingly, the same exponential distribution describes a pseudo-acceleration calculated from fluctuations of snowflake terminal fall speed in still air. This equivalence suggests an underlying connection between how turbulence determines the trajectories of particles and the microphysics determining the evolution of their shapes and sizes.
Skip Nav Destination
A universal scaling law for Lagrangian snowflake accelerations in atmospheric turbulence
CHORUS
Article navigation
December 2023
Research Article|
December 19 2023
A universal scaling law for Lagrangian snowflake accelerations in atmospheric turbulence
Dhiraj K. Singh
;
Dhiraj K. Singh
(Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing)
1
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Utah
, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA
Search for other works by this author on:
Eric R. Pardyjak
;
Eric R. Pardyjak
(Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Resources, Supervision, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing)
1
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Utah
, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA
Search for other works by this author on:
Timothy J. Garrett
Timothy J. Garrett
a)
(Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Supervision, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing)
2
Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah
, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA
a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed: [email protected]
Search for other works by this author on:
a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed: [email protected]
Physics of Fluids 35, 123336 (2023)
Article history
Received:
August 21 2023
Accepted:
November 03 2023
Citation
Dhiraj K. Singh, Eric R. Pardyjak, Timothy J. Garrett; A universal scaling law for Lagrangian snowflake accelerations in atmospheric turbulence. Physics of Fluids 1 December 2023; 35 (12): 123336. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0173359
Download citation file:
Pay-Per-View Access
$40.00
Sign In
You could not be signed in. Please check your credentials and make sure you have an active account and try again.
Citing articles via
Chinese Academy of Science Journal Ranking System (2015–2023)
Cruz Y. Li (李雨桐), 李雨桐, et al.
Fall and breakup of miscible magnetic fluid drops in a Hele–Shaw cell
M. S. Krakov (М. С. Краков), М. С. Краков, et al.
Referee acknowledgment for 2024
Alan Jeffrey Giacomin
Related Content
Modeling ice crystal growth using the lattice Boltzmann method
Physics of Fluids (January 2022)
Comparative analysis of the effect of crosswind speed and direction on snow accumulation of high-speed train bogies region
Physics of Fluids (December 2024)
A particle-scale investigation of outdoor machine-made snow density: The role of critical droplet diameter
Physics of Fluids (March 2025)
Effect of the arrangement of two nozzles on morphology, velocity, and particle size distribution of artificial snow-making spray field
Physics of Fluids (May 2023)
A new drag model for bidisperse particle agglomerates
Physics of Fluids (March 2025)