Research Area:Atmosphere, Land surface, Turbulence
Figure 1. (a) Snap shot of a cross section of potential temperature and surface sensible heat fluxes simulated by LES-ALM. (b) As (a), but for specific humidity and latent heat flux. A large updraft eddy at x = 2 km carries heat and moisture upwards, and a large downdraft eddy at x = 4 km carries heat downwards and moisture upwards (Shao et al. 2013).
We have been developing a numerical modeling system, known as LES-ALM, for simulation of heterogeneous atmospheric and land-surface processes on scale of atmospheric large eddies. LES-ALM includes a large-eddy flow model and a land-surface scheme which ensures the adequate representation of atmosphere–land-surface interactions on large-eddy scales. Improvements made to the land-surface scheme include (1) a multi-layer canopy scheme; (2) a method for flux estimates consistent with the large-eddy sub-grid closure; and (3) an appropriate soil-layer configuration. The model has been implemented to the Selhausen-Merken test site and validated with TR32 airborne and ground-based observations (Shao et al. 2013). The rapid large-eddy and surface feedbacks have been investigated by Liu and Shao (2013). The current research focus is on the propagation of land-surface patterns into the atmosphere. A technique has been developed for quantifying land-surface heterogeneity using the information entropy spectrum (IES). IES allows the identification of dominant heterogeneity scales and provides a sound basis for land-surface simplifications and reconstructions in atmospheric models (Hintz et al. 2014). Techniques based on cluster analysis have been under development for investigation of the propagation of surface patterns into the atmosphere (Lennartz-Sassinek et al. 2014).The scale dependencies of heterogeneous atmosphere-land interactions are being investigated from various perspectives (Shao et al. 2014; Liu et al. 2014).
Cooperation partner:
Prof. Dr.Yaping ShaoPrincipal Investigatorin C7, D6, Z4
University of CologneInstitute forGeophysics and Meteorology
Pohligstr. 350969 Cologne Germany
yshao@uni-koeln.de
Dr.Shaofeng LiuScientistin D6
University of CologneInstitut ofGeophysics and Meteorology
sliu03@uni-koeln.de
Stefanie NeskePh.D. Studentin C7, D6
sneske@uni-koeln.de
M.Sc.Zahra ParsakhooPh.D. Studentin D6, C7
z.parsakhoo@uni-koeln.de
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