Scale Awareness, Resolved Circulations, and Practical Limits in the MYNN–EDMF Boundary Layer and Shallow Cumulus Scheme

Author:

Angevine Wayne M.12,Olson Joseph3,Gristey Jake J.12,Glenn Ian12,Feingold Graham2,Turner David D.3

Affiliation:

1. a Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

2. b NOAA/Chemical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

3. c NOAA/Global Systems Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

AbstractProper behavior of physics parameterizations in numerical models at grid sizes of order 1 km is a topic of current research. Modifications to parameterization schemes to accommodate varying grid sizes are termed “scale aware.” The general problem of grids on which a physical process is partially resolved is called the “gray zone” or “terra incognita.” Here we examine features of the Mellor–Yamada–Nakanishi–Niino (MYNN) boundary layer scheme with eddy diffusivity and mass flux (EDMF) that were intended to provide scale awareness, as implemented in WRF, version 4.1. Scale awareness is provided by reducing the intensity of nonlocal components of the vertical mixing in the scheme as the grid size decreases. However, we find that the scale-aware features cause poorer performance in our tests on a 600-m grid. The resolved circulations on the 600-m grid have different temporal and spatial scales than are found in large-eddy simulations of the same cases, for reasons that are well understood theoretically and are described in the literature. The circulations [model convectively induced secondary circulations (M-CISCs)] depend on the grid size and on details of the model numerics. We conclude that scale awareness should be based on effective resolution, and not on grid size, and that the gray-zone problem for boundary layer turbulence and shallow cumulus cannot be solved simply by reducing the intensity of the parameterization. Parameterizations with different characteristics may lead to different conclusions.

Funder

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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