Abstract

There have been significant advances in our understanding of the climate system, but two major problems still exist in modeling atmospheric response during cold seasons: (a) lack of detailed physical description of snow and frozen soil in the land-surface schemes and (b) insufficient understanding of regional climate response from the cryosphere. A multilayer snow land-surface model based on the conservations of heat and water substance inside the soil and snow is coupled to an atmospheric RCM, to investigate the effect of snow, snowmelt, and soil frost on the atmosphere during cold seasons. The coupled RCM shows much improvement in moisture and temperature simulation for March-April of 1997 compared to simple parameterizations used in GCMs. The importance of such processes in RCM simulation is more pronounced in mid-to-high latitudes during the transition period (winter–spring) affected by changes in surface energy and the hydrological cycle. The effect of including cryosphere physics through snow-albedo feedback mechanism changes the meridional temperature gradients and in turn changes the location of weather systems passing over the region. The implications from our study suggest that, to reduce the uncertainties and better assess the impacts of climate change, RCM simulations should include the detailed snow and frozen soil processes.

Highlights

  • Accurate simulation of snowmelt runoff and infiltration is crucial for the mesoscale numerical simulation of atmosphere-land interactions [1, 2]

  • This paper studies the role of such processes to address possible deficiencies in regional climate models for studying future climate change scenarios

  • We have initially distinguished the amounts of soil ice and liquid based on the soil temperature of 273.15 K, whereas the Purdue Regional Climate Model (PRCM)-LSS has no soil ice included

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Summary

Introduction

Accurate simulation of snowmelt runoff and infiltration is crucial for the mesoscale numerical simulation of atmosphere-land interactions [1, 2]. Including detailed snow and frozen soil physics can improve seasonal cycle of snowmelt in climate simulations, and the surface energy and water budgets in high and temperate latitudes [3, 4].

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