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Tomer Duman

Researcher at University of New Mexico

Publications -  23
Citations -  443

Tomer Duman is an academic researcher from University of New Mexico. The author has contributed to research in topics: Canopy & Drag. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 20 publications receiving 218 citations. Previous affiliations of Tomer Duman include Rutgers University & Duke University.

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Representativeness of Eddy-Covariance flux footprints for areas surrounding AmeriFlux sites

Housen Chu, +74 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the representativeness of flux footprints and evaluate potential biases as a consequence of the footprint-to-target-area mismatch, which can be used as a guide to identify site-periods suitable for specific applications.
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The effect of plant water storage on water fluxes within the coupled soil-plant system.

TL;DR: Considering the co-occurrence of PWS usage and HR during a single extended dry-down, a wide range of plant attributes and environmental/soil conditions selected to enhance or suppress plant drought resilience is discussed.
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Exceptional heat and atmospheric dryness amplified losses of primary production during the 2020 U.S. Southwest hot drought

TL;DR: In this article , the U.S. Southwest experienced one of the most intense hot droughts on record, with record low precipitation and record high air temperature and VPD across the region.
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The non-local character of turbulence asymmetry in the convective atmospheric boundary layer

TL;DR: In this article, large-eddy simulation (LES) runs for the atmospheric boundary layer, spanning weakly to strongly convective conditions, are used to examine the role of third-order moments in non-local transport effects, such as Deardorff's countergradient models, Wyngaard's transport asymmetry closures or mass-flux parametrization.
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Dissipation Intermittency Increases Long-Distance Dispersal of Heavy Particles in the Canopy Sublayer

TL;DR: In this paper, the dispersion of heavy particles such as seeds within canopies is evaluated using Lagrangian stochastic trajectory models, laboratory, and field experiments, showing that adding turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate intermittency is shown to increase long-distance dispersal by contributing to the intermittent ejection of particles to regions of high mean velocity outside the canopy volume.