scholarly journals The role of improved soil moisture for the characteristics of surface energy fluxes in the ECMWF reanalyses

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilhelm May

Abstract. In this study, the role that more realistic soil moisture has for the characteristics of surface energy fluxes in two sets of reanalyses performed at ECMWF is investigated. These are the standard set of reanalyses ERA-Interim (ERAInt) and the ERA-Interim/Land reanalyses of the land surface conditions (ERAInt/Land). In the latter, the ECMWF's land surface model has been forced with the meteorological fields from ERAInt, including an adjustment of precipitation based on the monthly mean values from the Global Precipitation Climatology Project data set. Adjusting precipitation has a distinct impact on the soil moisture content in the two sets of reanalyses. ERAInt is characterized by a general tendency to underestimate (overestimate) soil moisture in regions with a relatively high (low) soil moisture content. The differences in soil moisture between ERAInt and ERAInt/Land vary only slightly in the course of the year. This is not the case for precipitation, where the differences between the two sets of reanalyses vary markedly between different seasons. The direct impact of the regional differences in precipitation between ERAInt and ERAInt/Land on the corresponding deviations in soil moisture varies considerably by region. One reason is that the regional differences in precipitation vary by season, while the regional differences in soil moisture typically persist throughout the year. Another reason is that the specific nature of the interaction between precipitation and soil moisture diverges between different regions, depending on the climate conditions and on the degree to which the soil is saturated with moisture. The differences in soil moisture between the two sets of reanalyses have notable effects on the characteristics of surface energy fluxes. The nature of these effects differs by region and also by season, that is the coupling between soil moisture and the latent or the sensible heat flux is positive in one region or season, respectively, and negative in another one. In any case, the differences in the soil moisture content typically affect the latent and the sensible heat flux in opposite ways. Increases (decreases) in latent heat flux typically coincide with decreases (increases) in sensible heat flux. By this, the differences in soil moisture have a substantial impact on the partitioning of latent and sensible heat flux. The effect of the soil moisture differences on the evaporative fraction, for instance, is mainly governed by the impact on the latent heat flux because of the opposite effects on latent and sensible heat fluxes and, hence, only a weak impact on the total surface energy flux. The effect on the Bowen ratio, on the other hand, is for the most part controlled by the impact on the sensible heat flux, with higher (lower) values of the Bowen ratio in regions with increased (decreased) sensible heat flux.

2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cezar Kongoli ◽  
William P. Kustas ◽  
Martha C. Anderson ◽  
John M. Norman ◽  
Joseph G. Alfieri ◽  
...  

Abstract The utility of a snow–vegetation energy balance model for estimating surface energy fluxes is evaluated with field measurements at two sites in a rangeland ecosystem in southwestern Idaho during the winter of 2007: one site dominated by aspen vegetation and the other by sagebrush. Model parameterizations are adopted from the two-source energy balance (TSEB) modeling scheme, which estimates fluxes from the vegetation and surface substrate separately using remotely sensed measurements of land surface temperature. Modifications include development of routines to account for surface snowmelt energy flux and snow masking of vegetation. Comparisons between modeled and measured surface energy fluxes of net radiation and turbulent heat showed reasonable agreement when considering measurement uncertainties in snow environments and the simplified algorithm used for the snow surface heat flux, particularly on a daily basis. There was generally better performance over the aspen field site, likely due to more reliable input data of snow depth/snow cover. The model was robust in capturing the evolution of surface energy fluxes during melt periods. The model behavior was also consistent with previous studies that indicate the occurrence of upward sensible heat fluxes during daytime owing to solar heating of vegetation limbs and branches, which often exceeds the downward sensible heat flux driving the snowmelt. However, model simulations over aspen trees showed that the upward sensible heat flux could be reversed for a lower canopy fraction owing to the dominance of downward sensible heat flux over snow. This indicates that reliable vegetation or snow cover fraction inputs to the model are needed for estimating fluxes over snow-covered landscapes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. Iarovaia ◽  
V. V. Efimov ◽  
◽  

Purpose. The aim of the paper is to study the polar low on January 18–20, 2017 using the sensitivity numerical experiments. The experiments were performed to analyse direct effect of the surface energy fluxes and condensational heating on the cyclone structure and intensity. Methods and Results. The Polar WRF model was used for the cyclone simulations. In order to study the cyclone direct response to the changes in the model, all the experiments started only after the polar low had reached its mature stage at 00:00 on January, 20. Five numerical experiments were performed, in which the following parameters were turned off: 1) sensible heat flux only, 2) latent heat flux only, 3) both surface energy fluxes, 4) phase change heat transfer in the atmosphere and 5) phase change heat transfer in the atmosphere as well as surface energy fluxes. The cyclone intensity was defined by the minimum sea level pressure in its center. Conclusions. It is shown that in all the numerical experiments, the cyclone intensity as well as its maximum wind speed at the model lowest level decreased. In experiments 1 and 2, the intensity decrease was nearly the same, i.e. at the mature stage, the sensible and latent heat fluxes were equally important for the cyclone intensity. In experiments 1, 3 and 5 (with the sensible heat flux turned off), the atmosphere static stability increased significantly due to considerable decrease of the air temperature at the model lowest level. In experiment 4, the planetary boundary layer became more unstable since evaporative cooling was turned off in the model. In experiments 1, 3 and 5, integral kinetic energy of the cyclone increased despite the fact that its intensity and maximum surface wind speed decreased. It is shown that such a response of the cyclone was, most probably, caused by decrease of the energy dissipation in the surface layer due to the increased atmospheric stability.


2016 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 861-882 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Christiaan Kalverla ◽  
Gert-Jan Duine ◽  
Gert-Jan Steeneveld ◽  
Thierry Hedde

AbstractIn the winter of 2012/13, the Katabatic Winds and Stability over Cadarache for the Dispersion of Effluents (KASCADE) observational campaign was carried out in southeastern France to characterize the wind and thermodynamic structure of the (stable) planetary boundary layer (PBL). Data were collected with two micrometeorological towers, a sodar, a tethered balloon, and radiosoundings. Here, this dataset is used to evaluate the representation of the boundary layer in the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model. In general, it is found that diurnal temperature range (DTR) is largely underestimated, there is a strong negative bias in both longwave radiation components, and evapotranspiration is overestimated. An illustrative case is subjected to a thorough model-physics evaluation. First, five PBL parameterization schemes and two land surface schemes are employed. A marginal sensitivity to PBL parameterization is found, and the sophisticated Noah land surface model represents the extremes in skin temperature better than does a more simple thermal diffusion scheme. In a second stage, sensitivity tests for land surface–atmosphere coupling (through parameterization of z0h/z0m), initial soil moisture content, and radiation parameterization were performed. Relatively strong surface coupling and low soil moisture content result in a larger sensible heat flux, deeper PBL, and larger DTR. The larger sensible heat flux is not supported by the observations, however. It turns out that, for the selected case, a combination of subsidence and warm-air advection is not accurately simulated, but this inaccuracy cannot fully explain the discrepancies found in the WRF simulations. The results of the sensitivity analysis reiterate the important role of initial soil moisture values.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. van Wessem ◽  
C. H. Reijmer ◽  
J. T. M. Lenaerts ◽  
W. J. van de Berg ◽  
M. R. van den Broeke ◽  
...  

Abstract. In this study the effects of changes in the physics package of the regional atmospheric climate model RACMO2 on the modelled surface energy balance, near-surface temperature and wind speed of Antarctica are presented. The physics package update primarily consists of an improved turbulent and radiative flux scheme and a revised cloud scheme that includes a parameterisation for ice cloud super-saturation. The ice cloud super-saturation has led to more moisture being transported onto the continent, resulting in more and optically thicker clouds and more downward long-wave radiation. Overall, the updated model better represents the surface energy balance, based on a comparison with >750 months of data from nine automatic weather stations located in East Antarctica. Especially the representation of the turbulent sensible heat flux and net long-wave radiative flux has improved with a decrease in biases of up to 40%. As a result, modelled surface temperatures have increased and the bias, when compared to 10 m snow temperatures from 64 ice-core observations, has decreased from −2.3 K to −1.3 K. The weaker surface temperature inversion consequently improves the representation of the sensible heat flux, whereas wind speed biases remain unchanged. However, significant model biases remain, partly because RACMO2 at a resolution of 27 km is unable to resolve steep topography.


2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (258) ◽  
pp. 543-555 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsey Nicholson ◽  
Ivana Stiperski

AbstractWe present the first direct comparison of turbulence conditions measured simultaneously over exposed ice and a 0.08 m thick supraglacial debris cover on Suldenferner, a small glacier in the Italian Alps. Surface roughness, sensible heat fluxes (~20–50 W m−2), latent heat fluxes (~2–10 W m−2), topology and scale of turbulence are similar over both glacier surface types during katabatic and synoptically disturbed conditions. Exceptions are sunny days when buoyant convection becomes significant over debris-covered ice (sensible heat flux ~ −100 W m−2; latent heat flux ~ −30 W m−2) and prevailing katabatic conditions are rapidly broken down even over this thin debris cover. The similarity in turbulent properties implies that both surface types can be treated the same in terms of boundary layer similarity theory. The differences in turbulence between the two surface types on this glacier are dominated by the radiative and thermal contrasts, thus during sunny days debris cover alters both the local surface turbulent energy fluxes and the glacier component of valley circulation. These variations under different flow conditions should be accounted for when distributing temperature fields for modeling applications over partially debris-covered glaciers.


2005 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 941-953 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wade T. Crow ◽  
Fuqin Li ◽  
William P. Kustas

Abstract The treatment of aerodynamic surface temperature in soil–vegetation–atmosphere transfer (SVAT) models can be used to classify approaches into two broad categories. The first category contains models utilizing remote sensing (RS) observations of surface radiometric temperature to estimate aerodynamic surface temperature and solve the terrestrial energy balance. The second category contains combined water and energy balance (WEB) approaches that simultaneously solve for surface temperature and energy fluxes based on observations of incoming radiation, precipitation, and micrometeorological variables. To date, few studies have focused on cross comparing model predictions from each category. Land surface and remote sensing datasets collected during the 2002 Soil Moisture–Atmosphere Coupling Experiment (SMACEX) provide an opportunity to evaluate and intercompare spatially distributed surface energy balance models. Intercomparison results presented here focus on the ability of a WEB-SVAT approach [the TOPmodel-based Land–Atmosphere Transfer Scheme (TOPLATS)] and an RS-SVAT approach [the Two-Source Energy Balance (TSEB) model] to accurately predict patterns of turbulent energy fluxes observed during SMACEX. During the experiment, TOPLATS and TSEB latent heat flux predictions match flux tower observations with root-mean-square (rms) accuracies of 67 and 63 W m−2, respectively. TSEB predictions of sensible heat flux are significantly more accurate with an rms accuracy of 22 versus 46 W m−2 for TOPLATS. The intercomparison of flux predictions from each model suggests that modeling errors for each approach are sufficiently independent and that opportunities exist for improving the performance of both models via data assimilation and model calibration techniques that integrate RS- and WEB-SVAT energy flux predictions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 17 (14) ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allison L. Steiner ◽  
Dori Mermelstein ◽  
Susan J. Cheng ◽  
Tracy E. Twine ◽  
Andrew Oliphant

Abstract Atmospheric aerosols scatter and potentially absorb incoming solar radiation, thereby reducing the total amount of radiation reaching the surface and increasing the fraction that is diffuse. The partitioning of incoming energy at the surface into sensible heat flux and latent heat flux is postulated to change with increasing aerosol concentrations, as an increase in diffuse light can reach greater portions of vegetated canopies. This can increase photosynthesis and transpiration rates in the lower canopy and potentially decrease the ratio of sensible to latent heat for the entire canopy. Here, half-hourly and hourly surface fluxes from six Flux Network (FLUXNET) sites in the coterminous United States are evaluated over the past decade (2000–08) in conjunction with satellite-derived aerosol optical depth (AOD) to determine if atmospheric aerosols systematically influence sensible and latent heat fluxes. Satellite-derived AOD is used to classify days as high or low AOD and establish the relationship between aerosol concentrations and the surface energy fluxes. High AOD reduces midday net radiation by 6%–65% coupled with a 9%–30% decrease in sensible and latent heat fluxes, although not all sites exhibit statistically significant changes. The partitioning between sensible and latent heat varies between ecosystems, with two sites showing a greater decrease in latent heat than sensible heat (Duke Forest and Walker Branch), two sites showing equivalent reductions (Harvard Forest and Bondville), and one site showing a greater decrease in sensible heat than latent heat (Morgan–Monroe). These results suggest that aerosols trigger an ecosystem-dependent response to surface flux partitioning, yet the environmental drivers for this response require further exploration.


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