Abstract

AbstractThe representation of stratocumulus clouds, and of the stratocumulus to cumulus transitions which are ubiquitous features of marine boundary layer clouds, remains a challenge for climate models. We show how a mass flux representation of boundary layer convective structures combined with an eddy diffusivity scheme, the “thermal plume model,” first developed to represent cumulus clouds, can also adequately simulate stratocumulus and the stratocumulus to cumulus transition in a climate model. To achieve this, the detrainment formulation, in which detrainment increases for increasing negative buoyancy, has to be slightly modified: the buoyancy of a thermal plume parcel of air is computed by comparing the virtual potential temperature θv,th of the parcel with that of the surrounding environment θv,env at a given distance above instead of at the same level. This is consistent with the picture of detrained air parcels that experience some overshoot and reach a final destination at a level lower than the one at which they effectively leave the cloud or organized convective plume. The impacts of this modification are documented both for selected cases of stratocumulus, in comparison with large‐eddy simulations, and in full 3‐D climate simulations, in comparison with satellite observations of cloud cover. The modified scheme provides a uniform treatment of the dry convective boundary layer, of cumulus clouds, of stratocumulus, and of the transition from stratocumulus to cumulus. It is included in the most recent version of the LMDZ atmospheric general circulation model.

Highlights

  • Stratocumulus clouds cover on average 20% of the Earth's surface (Wood, 2012)

  • This top entrainment to the cloud top radiative cooling and subcloud layer convective activity. This modification of the thermal plume model is one of the main improvements of the Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace (IPSL) climate model IPSL-CM for the coming sixth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP; see e.g., Taylor et al, 2012), and the present paper aims to serve as a reference of this model version for this particular aspect

  • If the thermal plume model is deactivated, the cloud deck is strong but the increase in cloud top height is not captured and the cloud evolves into a stratus lowering fog

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Summary

Introduction

Stratocumulus clouds cover on average 20% of the Earth's surface (Wood, 2012). They are prevalent in the eastern subtropical oceans, which are characterized by strong large-scale subsidence. It is shown in particular that the compensating subsidence of the thermal rising plumes at the top of stratocumulus acts as a parameterization of boundary layer top entrainment and that this parameterization seems to reasonably account well for the sensitivity of this top entrainment to the cloud top radiative cooling and subcloud layer convective activity This modification of the thermal plume model is one of the main improvements of the Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace (IPSL) climate model IPSL-CM for the coming sixth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP; see e.g., Taylor et al, 2012), and the present paper aims to serve as a reference of this model version for this particular aspect.

The Thermal Plume Model
Initial Formulation
LMDZ Results
Conclusion
Full Text
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