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Long-Term Simulations of Thermally Driven Flows and Orographic Convection at Convection-Parameterizing and Cloud-Resolving Resolutions
83
Citations
69
References
2013
Year
Long-term SimulationsEngineeringTopographic FlowsClimate ModelingEuropean AlpsEarth System ScienceConvective Heat TransferCloud-resolving ResolutionsEarth SciencePrecipitation ProcessesNumerical Weather PredictionConvection SchemeMixed ConvectionAtmospheric ScienceMicrometeorologyNumerical SimulationMeteorological MeasurementNatural ConvectionClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyMeteorologyMesoscale MeteorologyCloud DynamicGeographyOrographic ConvectionClimate DynamicsClimatologyMeteorological Forcing
Abstract The purpose of this paper is to validate the representation of topographic flows and moist convection over the European Alps in a convection-parameterizing simulation (CPM; Δ x = 6.6 km) and two cloud-resolving simulations (CRM; Δ x = 1.1 and 2.2 km). All simulations and further sensitivity experiments are validated against a large set of observations for an 18-day fair-weather summer period. The episode considered is characterized by pronounced plain–valley pressure gradients, strong daytime upvalley flows, and weak nighttime down-valley flows. In addition, convective precipitation is recorded during the late afternoon and is preceded by a phase of shallow convection. The observed transition from shallow to deep convection occurs within a 3-h period. The results indicate good agreement between both CRMs and the observed diurnal evolution in terms of near-surface winds, cloud formation, and precipitation. The differences between the two CRMs are surprisingly small. In contrast, the CPM produces too-early peaks of cloud cover and precipitation that are due to a too-early activation of deep convection. Detailed sensitivity experiments show that the convection scheme, rather than the underresolved small-scale topography, is responsible for the poor performance of the CPM. In addition, observations and simulations show that late-morning mass convergence does not correlate with afternoon precipitation. Rather, it is found that enhanced convective activity is related to increased conditional instability.
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