The fieldClim
package was originally designed as a course project to the course Geländeklimatologie
, held by Prof. Dr. Jörg Bendix at the Philipps-University of Marburg in summer term 2020. Thus, the calculations and formulas of this package are based on this course, as well as the book Geländeklimatologie
(Field climatology) by Jörg Bendix (2004; ISBN 978-3-443-07139-4).
fieldClim
is designed as a handy tool, that lets you calculate various weather and micro-climate conditions, based on the measurements of a weather station. It lets you create a weather_station
-object, that can then be used to call most of the functions without the necessity of further specify input variables. In addition, all functions can also be called by manually inputting the needed variables, if the user whishes to do so.
water
firstdevtools::install_github("jonasViehweger/fieldClim")
library(fieldClim)
build_weather_station()
function (for usage see ?build_weather_station()
)If you got your weather station data and and simply want to get a quick overview of the overall micro-climatic conditions at the location of your weather station, such as the atmospheric stability and the latent and sensible heat flows (for a list of all output parameters, see ?as.data.frame.weather_station
), you just need three functions: build_weather_station()
, turb_flux_calc()
and as.data.frame()
.
# Load package
library(fieldClim)
# Load sample data
ws <- get(data(weather_station_example_data, package="fieldClim"))
# if your datetime coloumn is not in the POSIXlt-format
# you need to convert it before you continue
ws$datetime <- as.POSIXlt(ws$datetime)
# now you can build a "weather_station"-object
test_station <- build_weather_station(lat = 50.840503,
lon = 8.6833,
elev = 270,
surface_type = "Meadow",
obs_height = 0.3, # obstacle height
z1 = 2, # measurement heights
z2 = 10,
datetime = ws$datetime,
t1 = ws$t1, # temperature
t2 = ws$t2,
v1 = ws$v1, # windspeed
v2 = ws$v2,
hum1 = ws$hum1, # humidity
hum2 = ws$hum2,
sw_in = ws$rad_sw_in, # shortwave radiation
sw_out = ws$rad_sw_out,
lw_in = ws$rad_lw_in, # longwave radiation
lw_out = ws$rad_lw_out,
soil_flux = ws$heatflux_soil)
# after creating the "weather_station"-object,
# you can calculate and add the turbulent fluxes
station_turbulent <- turb_flux_calc(test_station)
# for a convenient output of the calculated data, you can convert it into a data frame
out <- as.data.frame(station_turbulent)
For a more comprehensive example, you might have a look at the vignette.