In some nights, the near-surface temperature can drop dramatically and turbulence in the stably stratified boundary layer becomes very weak, such that the lfow reaches a (quasi-) laminar state. In other cases, however, the atmosphere remains in a turbulent state and temperatures stay relatively high. Recently, the appearance of two distinct boundary layer regimes was explained by a new theoretical framework. This theory builds on the fact that the turbulent heat flux in stably stratified flow is limited to a maximum for given wind shear. This introduces a characteristic flux-based velocity scale, which can be used to predict the regimes. This hypothesis is consistent with field observations and numerical results. Also, the hypothesis is generalised to a dimensionless framework.
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