The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP Site

Abstract Continental shallow clouds are an important component of the land‐atmosphere coupled climate system because of their role in modulating energy and water budgets. The parameterization of these clouds in climate models presents a significant challenge. We evaluate the potential impact of subg...

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Main Authors: Heng Xiao, Larry K. Berg, Maoyi Huang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union (AGU) 2018-06-01
Series:Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Subjects:
LES
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2018MS001286
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spelling doaj-3b554db8f58249eca7c2d9c8e46d74bd2020-11-25T01:27:39ZengAmerican Geophysical Union (AGU)Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems1942-24662018-06-011061220124410.1029/2018MS001286The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP SiteHeng Xiao0Larry K. Berg1Maoyi Huang2Atmospheric Sciences and Global Change DivisionPacific Northwest National LaboratoryRichland Washington USAAtmospheric Sciences and Global Change DivisionPacific Northwest National LaboratoryRichland Washington USAAtmospheric Sciences and Global Change DivisionPacific Northwest National LaboratoryRichland Washington USAAbstract Continental shallow clouds are an important component of the land‐atmosphere coupled climate system because of their role in modulating energy and water budgets. The parameterization of these clouds in climate models presents a significant challenge. We evaluate the potential impact of subgrid‐scale (for climate models) land‐atmosphere interactions on shallow clouds using nested large‐eddy simulations (LESs). We compare LESs that allow for land‐atmosphere interactions to ones that artificially suppress all or part of them by smoothing out surface heterogeneities in surface heat, moisture and radiation fluxes within the domain. The LES domains are coupled to an interactive land surface model and nested inside a mesoscale domain. Three summertime shallow convection cases over the Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Facility's Southern Great Plains site are examined. A consistent increase in cloud water content is observed in all cases when surface heterogeneities and the land‐atmosphere interactions they induce in the LES domain are removed. By comparing experiments where only surface flux heterogeneities induced by cloud shadows are removed to ones where all surface flux heterogeneities are removed, we find that cloud shading‐induced surface heterogeneities can have a larger impact on shallow convection than static land surface heterogeneities in our cases. Furthermore, the impact of cloud shading on cloud water content and cloud size is found to vary significantly with the solar incidence angle. Our results suggest that the impact of cloud shadows needs to be considered when parameterizing land‐atmosphere interactions in the presence of shallow clouds for regional or global climate models.https://doi.org/10.1029/2018MS001286LESland‐atmosphere interactioncontinental shallow cloudsclimate model biases
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heng Xiao
Larry K. Berg
Maoyi Huang
spellingShingle Heng Xiao
Larry K. Berg
Maoyi Huang
The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP Site
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
LES
land‐atmosphere interaction
continental shallow clouds
climate model biases
author_facet Heng Xiao
Larry K. Berg
Maoyi Huang
author_sort Heng Xiao
title The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP Site
title_short The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP Site
title_full The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP Site
title_fullStr The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP Site
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Surface Heterogeneities and Land‐Atmosphere Interactions on Shallow Clouds Over ARM SGP Site
title_sort impact of surface heterogeneities and land‐atmosphere interactions on shallow clouds over arm sgp site
publisher American Geophysical Union (AGU)
series Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
issn 1942-2466
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Abstract Continental shallow clouds are an important component of the land‐atmosphere coupled climate system because of their role in modulating energy and water budgets. The parameterization of these clouds in climate models presents a significant challenge. We evaluate the potential impact of subgrid‐scale (for climate models) land‐atmosphere interactions on shallow clouds using nested large‐eddy simulations (LESs). We compare LESs that allow for land‐atmosphere interactions to ones that artificially suppress all or part of them by smoothing out surface heterogeneities in surface heat, moisture and radiation fluxes within the domain. The LES domains are coupled to an interactive land surface model and nested inside a mesoscale domain. Three summertime shallow convection cases over the Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Facility's Southern Great Plains site are examined. A consistent increase in cloud water content is observed in all cases when surface heterogeneities and the land‐atmosphere interactions they induce in the LES domain are removed. By comparing experiments where only surface flux heterogeneities induced by cloud shadows are removed to ones where all surface flux heterogeneities are removed, we find that cloud shading‐induced surface heterogeneities can have a larger impact on shallow convection than static land surface heterogeneities in our cases. Furthermore, the impact of cloud shading on cloud water content and cloud size is found to vary significantly with the solar incidence angle. Our results suggest that the impact of cloud shadows needs to be considered when parameterizing land‐atmosphere interactions in the presence of shallow clouds for regional or global climate models.
topic LES
land‐atmosphere interaction
continental shallow clouds
climate model biases
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2018MS001286
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