Abstract

Abstract. A generalized mass-flux formulation is presented, which no longer takes a limit of vanishing fractional areas for subgrid-scale components. The presented formulation is applicable to a~situation in which the scale separation is still satisfied, but fractional areas occupied by individual subgrid-scale components are no longer small. A self-consistent formulation is presented by generalizing the mass-flux formulation under the segmentally-constant approximation (SCA) to the grid–scale variabilities. The present formulation is expected to alleviate problems arising from increasing resolutions of operational forecast models without invoking more extensive overhaul of parameterizations. The present formulation leads to an analogy of the large-scale atmospheric flow with multi-component flows. This analogy allows a generality of including any subgrid-scale variability into the mass-flux parameterization under SCA. Those include stratiform clouds as well as cold pools in the boundary layer. An important finding under the present formulation is that the subgrid-scale quantities are advected by the large-scale velocities characteristic of given subgrid-scale components (large-scale subcomponent flows), rather than by the total large-scale flows as simply defined by grid-box average. In this manner, each subgrid-scale component behaves as if like a component of multi-component flows. This formulation, as a result, ensures the lateral interaction of subgrid-scale variability crossing the grid boxes, which are missing in the current parameterizations based on vertical one-dimensional models, and leading to a reduction of the grid-size dependencies in its performance. It is shown that the large-scale subcomponent flows are driven by large-scale subcomponent pressure gradients. The formulation, as a result, furthermore includes a self-contained description of subgrid-scale momentum transport. The main purpose of the present paper is to appeal the importance of this new possibility suggested herein to the numerical weather forecast community with implications for the other parameterizations (cloud fraction, mesoscale organization) as well as resolution-dependence of parameterizations.

Highlights

  • The present paper presents a generalization of the massflux parameterization formulation for representing nonconvective processes as well as convection

  • We provide an answer to the following question: Are the subgrid-scale parameterized variables advected by largescale flows? This is one of the typical questions often asked in a context of operational implementation of a subgrid-scale process parameterization

  • Implementation of the present scheme into an operational model is beyond the scope of the present paper

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The present paper presents a generalization of the massflux parameterization formulation for representing nonconvective processes as well as convection. Individual precipitating convective elements (category 1) occupy only very small fractional areas in the grid box, being consistent with the scale separation principle as assumed in the standard mass-flux parameterization. The situation considered in the present work is (1) fractional areas occupied by individual subgrid-scale components are no longer much smaller than unity; (2) the environment (non-convective area) no longer occupies a majority of the grid-box domain; and as a result, (3) subgridscale components are no longer exclusively surrounded by the environment, but more than often adjacent with the other subgrid-scale components Importance of such generalization in the mass-flux based parameterization cannot be overemphasized.

Analogy with multi-component flows
A basic set of equations: hydrostatic primitive equation system
A general formulation for the subgrid-scale processes under SCA
Prognostic equations
Horizontal divergence term
Contributions from the grid-box boundary
Turbulence effects
Horizontal momentum equation
Mass continuity
Summary
Comparison with the standard mass-flux formulation
Remaining problems: subgrid-scale component division rule
Remaining problems: entrainment and detrainment
Remaining problems: subcomponent prescription
Remaining problems: triggering
Remaining problems: deep convection
Possible applications: stratiform cloud representation
Possible applications: mesoscale organization
4.10 Possible applications: subgrid-scale momentum transport
4.11 Further issues: towards the scale independence
4.12 Further issues: high-resolution limit
Concluding remarks
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call