Using Continuous Ground-Based Radar and Lidar Measurements for Evaluating the Representation of Clouds in Four Operational Models

Author:

Bouniol Dominique1,Protat Alain23,Delanoë Julien4,Pelon Jacques5,Piriou Jean-Marcel1,Bouyssel François1,Tompkins Adrian M.6,Wilson Damian R.7,Morille Yohann8,Haeffelin Martial9,O’Connor Ewan J.410,Hogan Robin J.4,Illingworth Anthony J.4,Donovan David P.11,Baltink Henk-Klein11

Affiliation:

1. GAME/CNRM, CNRS/Météo-France, Toulouse, France

2. Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research, Melbourne, Australia

3. LATMOS-IPSL, CNRS/INSU, Vélizy, France

4. Meteorology Department, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom

5. LATMOS-IPSL, CNRS/INSU, Paris, France

6. European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, Reading, United Kingdom

7. Met Office, Exeter, United Kingdom

8. Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, CNRS, Palaiseau, France

9. Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace, CNRS, Palaiseau, France

10. Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland

11. Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, De Bilt, Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract The ability of four operational weather forecast models [ECMWF, Action de Recherche Petite Echelle Grande Echelle model (ARPEGE), Regional Atmospheric Climate Model (RACMO), and Met Office] to generate a cloud at the right location and time (the cloud frequency of occurrence) is assessed in the present paper using a two-year time series of observations collected by profiling ground-based active remote sensors (cloud radar and lidar) located at three different sites in western Europe (Cabauw, Netherlands; Chilbolton, United Kingdom; and Palaiseau, France). Particular attention is given to potential biases that may arise from instrumentation differences (especially sensitivity) from one site to another and intermittent sampling. In a second step the statistical properties of the cloud variables involved in most advanced cloud schemes of numerical weather forecast models (ice water content and cloud fraction) are characterized and compared with their counterparts in the models. The two years of observations are first considered as a whole in order to evaluate the accuracy of the statistical representation of the cloud variables in each model. It is shown that all models tend to produce too many high-level clouds, with too-high cloud fraction and ice water content. The midlevel and low-level cloud occurrence is also generally overestimated, with too-low cloud fraction but a correct ice water content. The dataset is then divided into seasons to evaluate the potential of the models to generate different cloud situations in response to different large-scale forcings. Strong variations in cloud occurrence are found in the observations from one season to the same season the following year as well as in the seasonal cycle. Overall, the model biases observed using the whole dataset are still found at seasonal scale, but the models generally manage to well reproduce the observed seasonal variations in cloud occurrence. Overall, models do not generate the same cloud fraction distributions and these distributions do not agree with the observations. Another general conclusion is that the use of continuous ground-based radar and lidar observations is definitely a powerful tool for evaluating model cloud schemes and for a responsive assessment of the benefit achieved by changing or tuning a model cloud parameterization.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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