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From Near-Neutral to Strongly Stratified: Adequately Modelling the Clear-Sky Nocturnal Boundary Layer at Cabauw.

Authors :
Baas, P.
van de Wiel, B. J. H.
van der Linden, S. J. A.
Bosveld, F. C.
Source :
Boundary-Layer Meteorology; Feb2018, Vol. 166 Issue 2, p217-238, 22p, 1 Chart, 11 Graphs
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The performance of an atmospheric single-column model (SCM) is studied systematically for stably-stratified conditions. To this end, 11 years (2005-2015) of daily SCM simulations were compared to observations from the Cabauw observatory, The Netherlands. Each individual clear-sky night was classified in terms of the ambient geostrophic wind speed with a $$1\hbox { m} \hbox { s}^{-1}$$ bin-width. Nights with overcast conditions were filtered out by selecting only those nights with an average net radiation of less than $$-\,30\hbox { W }\hbox {m}^{-2}$$ . A similar procedure was applied to the observational dataset. A comparison of observed and modelled ensemble-averaged profiles of wind speed and potential temperature and time series of turbulent fluxes showed that the model represents the dynamics of the nocturnal boundary layer (NBL) at Cabauw very well for a broad range of mechanical forcing conditions. No obvious difference in model performance was found between near-neutral and strongly-stratified conditions. Furthermore, observed NBL regime transitions are represented in a natural way. The reference model version performs much better than a model version that applies excessive vertical mixing as is done in several (global) operational models. Model sensitivity runs showed that for weak-wind conditions the inversion strength depends much more on details of the land-atmosphere coupling than on the turbulent mixing. The presented results indicate that in principle the physical parametrizations of large-scale atmospheric models are sufficiently equipped for modelling stably-stratified conditions for a wide range of forcing conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068314
Volume :
166
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Boundary-Layer Meteorology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
127460505
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10546-017-0304-8