Over Three Decades, And Counting, Of Near-Surface Turbulent Flux Measurements From The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (Arm) User Facility

  • Sites: US-A03, US-A10, US-A12, US-A14, US-A20, US-A30, US-A31, US-A33, US-A37, US-A38, US-A39, US-A40, US-A41, US-AC2, US-AC3, US-AC5, US-AC6, US-ARM, US-E32
  • Sullivan, R. C., Billesbach, D. P., Biraud, S., Chan, S., Hart, R., Keeler, E., Kyrouac, J., Pal, S., Pekour, M., Sullivan, S. L., Theisen, A., Tuftedal, M., Cook, D. R. (2025/09/29) Over Three Decades, And Counting, Of Near-Surface Turbulent Flux Measurements From The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (Arm) User Facility, Earth System Science Data, 17(9), 5007-5038. https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-17-5007-2025
  • Funding Agency: US Department of Energy

  • Processes mediating the coupling of terrestrial, aquatic, biospheric, and atmospheric systems influence weather, climate, and ecosystem dynamics via transfer of energy, momentum, water, and carbon (or other species). These exchange processes are quantified by measurements of near-surface turbulent fluxes. Understanding processes at these interfaces provides insight toward understanding and predicting current and future states within the Earth system. The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility has been conducting measurements of near-surface turbulent fluxes since the early 1990s at long-term fixed locations and shorter-term mobile deployments across the Earth. ARM has utilized two established methods for conducting these measurements: energy balance Bowen ratio (EBBR) and eddy covariance (EC). Primary measurements from the former include sensible and latent heat flux, while the latter also measures fluxes of momentum and carbon (primarily carbon dioxide, with methane fluxes measured at two locations to date). The EBBR systems have been deployed at 22 locations, and, to date, the EC systems have been deployed at over 50 sites, with plans for additional novel site locations in the future. Herein, the history, evolution, and key aspects of these instrument systems are documented, along with information on data quality assurance and post-processing, as well as best use practices. Additionally, three data validation experiments were recently conducted, and their key findings are summarized. Finally, ancillary datasets acquired by ARM, which can contextualize and aid interpretation of the near-surface turbulent flux measurements, are discussed.

    The datasets described herein include the eddy correlation flux measurement system: 30ECOR (https://doi.org/10.5439/1879993, Sullivan et al., 1997), 30QCECOR (https://doi.org/10.5439/1097546, Gaustad, 2003), ECORSF (https://doi.org/10.5439/1494128, Sullivan et al., 2019a), and associated AmeriFlux and Methane Value-Added Product, AMCMETHANE (https://doi.org/10.5439/1508268, Billesbach, 2011); the energy balance Bowen ratio system: 30EBBR (https://doi.org/10.5439/1023895, Sullivan et al., 1993) and 30BAEBBR (https://doi.org/10.5439/1027268, Gaustad and Xie, 1993); and the carbon dioxide flux measurement system: CO2FLX (https://doi.org/10.5439/1287574, https://doi.org/10.5439/1287575, https://doi.org/10.5439/1287576, Koontz et al., 2015a, b, c; https://doi.org/10.5439/1989774, https://doi.org/10.5439/1989776, https://doi.org/10.5439/1992202, Biraud and Chan, 2002a, b, c). These data can be found by searching the above data stream names at https://adc.arm.gov/discovery/#/results/ (last access: 8 September 2025).


  • https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/17/5007/2025/