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Buoyancy driven turbulence in the atmosphere

Buoyancy driven turbulence in the atmosphere. Stephan de Roode (TU Delft) Applied Physics Department Clouds, Climate and Air Quality s.r.deroode@tudelft.nl. N 2 O. CH 4. new methods for measuring emission rates. atmospheric boundary layer in the laboratory. Clouds, Climate and Air Quality

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Buoyancy driven turbulence in the atmosphere

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  1. Buoyancy driven turbulence in the atmosphere Stephan de Roode (TU Delft) Applied Physics Department Clouds, Climate and Air Quality s.r.deroode@tudelft.nl

  2. N2O CH4 new methods for measuring emission rates atmospheric boundary layer in the laboratory Clouds, Climate and Air Quality Harm Jonker, Pier Siebesma and Stephan de Roode cloud-climate feedback detailed numerical simulation

  3. Length scales in the atmosphere Landsat 60 km 65km LES 10 km ~1mm-100mm ~mm ~100m Earth 103 km courtesy: Harm Jonker

  4. Global mean turbulent heat fluxes source: Ruddiman, 2000

  5. No single model can encompass all relevant processes mm 10 m 100 m 1 km 10 km 100 km 1000 km 10000 km Cloud microphysics  turbulence Cumulus clouds Cumulonimbus clouds Mesoscale Convective systems Extratropical Cyclones Planetary waves DNS Subgrid Large Eddy Simulation (LES) Model Cloud System Resolving Model (CSRM) Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) Model Global Climate Model

  6. DALES: Dutch Atmospheric Large-Eddy Simulation Model Dry LES code (prognostic subgrid TKE, stability dependent length scale) Frans Nieuwstadt (KNMI) and R. A. Brost (NOAA/NCAR, USA) Radiation and moist thermodynamics Hans Cuijpers and Peter Duynkerke (KNMI/TU Delft, Utrecht University) Parallellisation and Poisson solver Matthieu Pourquie and Bendiks Jan Boersma (TU Delft) Drizzle Margreet Van Zanten and Pier Siebesma (UCLA/KNMI) Atmospheric Chemistry Jordi Vila (Wageningen University) Land-surface interaction, advection schemes Chiel van Heerwaarden (Wageningen University) Particle dispersion, numerics Thijs Heus and Harm Jonker (TU Delft)

  7. Contents Governing equations & static stability Observations, large-eddy simulations and parameterizations: - Clear convection - Latent heat release & shallow cumulus - Longwave radiative cooling & stratocumulus

  8. z Static stability measured vertical temperature profile Q: what will happen with the air parcel if it is vertically displaced? Temperature

  9. First law of thermodynamics: Conservation of energy added heat internal energy work cv = specific heat of dry air at constant volume (718 J kg-1K-1 at 0 oC) T = temperature p = air pressure r = air density

  10. Equation of state for dry air: gas law Combine gas law and energy conservation cp = specific heat of dry air at constant pressure (1005 J kg-1K-1 at 0 oC) Rd = gas constant for dry air (287 J kg-1K-1 )

  11. Hydrostatic equilibrium Gas law, energy conservation and hydrostatic equilibrium Adiabatic process dq=0  dry adiabatic lapse rate

  12. dry adiabatic lapse rate: –10K/km A dry air parcel, moved upwards, cools according to the dry adiabatic lapse rate. But now it is warmer than the environmental air, and experiences an upward force. F z unstable situation for dry air A dry air parcel, moved downwards, warms according to the dry adiabatic lapse rate. But now it is cooler than the environmental air, and experiences a downward force. F Atmospheric stability: dry air measured vertical temperature profile T

  13. A dry air parcel, moved upwards, cools according to the dry adiabatic lapse rate. But now it is cooler than the environmental air, and experiences a downward force. A dry air parcel, moved downwards, warms according to the dry adiabatic lapse rate. But now it is warmer than the environmental air, and experiences an upward force. F F stable situation for dry air dry adiabatic lapse rate: –10K/km z Atmospheric stability: dry air measured environmental temperature profile unstable situation for dry air T

  14. Harm Jonker's saline convective water tank Initial state: tank is filled with salt water Convection driven by a fresh water flux at the surface Schematic by Daniel Abrahams

  15. Convective water tank Movie by Phillia Lijdsman

  16. Adiabatic process dq=0  dry adiabatic lapse rate (2) The potential temperature q is the temperature if a parcel would be brought adiabatically to a reference pressure p0

  17. Balloon observations at Cabauw during daytime Q: what makes this case challlenging for modeling?

  18. LES results of a convective boundary layer: Buoyancy flux warm air going down entrainment of warm air warm air going up Q: what is sign of the mean tendency for qv?

  19. LES results Buoyancy flux and vertical velocity variance

  20. LES results of a convective boundary layer - resolved TKE budget

  21. LES results Humidity flux Flux-jump relation: w'q'T = -weDq Dq H we and wls are of the order 1 cm s-1

  22. Entrainment scaling Large-scale subsidence Entrainment atmospheric boundary layer Photograph: Adriaan Schuitmaker

  23. Conservation of energy: saturated case heat released by condensation internal energy work ql = liquid water content Lv = enthalpy of vaporization of water (2.5x106 J kg-1 at 0 oC)

  24. For a moist adiabatic process, the liquid water static energy (sl) is a conserved variable sl meteorologists

  25. F A moist air parcel, moved upwards, cools according to the wet adiabatic lapse rate. But now it is warmer than the environmental air, and experiences an upward force. F A dry air parcel, moved upwards, cools according to the dry adiabatic lapse rate. But now it is cooler than the environmental air, and experiences a downward force. z wet adiabatic lapse rate Atmospheric stability: conditional instability measured environmental temperature profile dry adiabatic lapse rate F T

  26. z Atmospheric stability: conditional instability stable for dry and moist air stable for dry air possibly unstable for moist air T Q: why possibly unstable for moist air?

  27. Convective transport in Shallow Cumulus: Characteristics Courtesy Bjorn Stevens LES Heus TU Delft

  28. Shallow cumulus movie by Thijs Heus

  29. Stratocumulus 1100 km 1100 km

  30. Longwave radiative flux (FL) profile in cloud Cloud top cooling!

  31. Turbulence in stratocumulus: LES results and observations Nighttime Daytime

  32. Standard transport parameterization approach: This unwanted situation can lead to: • Double counting of processes • Inconsistencies • Problems with transitions between different regimes: • dry pbl  shallow cu • scu  shallow cu • shallow cu deep cu

  33. e d M How to estimate updraft fields and mass flux? Betts 1974 JAS Arakawa&Schubert 1974 JAS Tiedtke 1988 MWR Gregory & Rowntree 1990 MWR Kain & Fritsch 1990 JAS And many more…….. The old working horse: Entraining plume model: Plus boundary conditions at cloud base.

  34. Downgradient-diffusion models

  35. Downgradient-diffusion models Analytical solutions for stable stratifications see Baas et al. (2008)

  36. Stable boundary layer solutions Nieuwstadt's (1984) z/L ∞

  37. Turbulence and clouds: do we care?

  38. Climate Model Sensistivity estimates of GCM’s participating in IPCC AR4 Source: IPCC Chapter 8 2007 • Spread in climate sensitivity: • concern for many aspects of climate change research, assesment of climate extremes, design of mitigation scenarios. • What is the origin of this spread? • Radiative Forcing, Climate feedbacks,

  39. Relative Contributions to the uncertainty in climate feedbacks Cloud feedback Surface albedo feedback Water vapor feedback Radiative effects only Source: Dufresne & Bony, Journal of Climate 2008 Uncertainty in climate sensitivity mainly due to (low) cloud feedbacks

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