Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European Cities

The increase in built surfaces constitutes the main reason for the formation of the Urban Heat Island (UHI), that is a metropolitan area significantly warmer than its surrounding rural areas. The urban heat islands and other urban-induced climate feedbacks may amplify heat stress and urban flooding...

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Main Authors: Valeria Garbero, Massimo Milelli, Edoardo Bucchignani, Paola Mercogliano, Mikhail Varentsov, Inna Rozinkina, Gdaliy Rivin, Denis Blinov, Hendrik Wouters, Jan-Peter Schulz, Ulrich Schättler, Francesca Bassani, Matthias Demuzere, Francesco Repola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Atmosphere
Subjects:
UHI
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/12/2/237
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author Valeria Garbero
Massimo Milelli
Edoardo Bucchignani
Paola Mercogliano
Mikhail Varentsov
Inna Rozinkina
Gdaliy Rivin
Denis Blinov
Hendrik Wouters
Jan-Peter Schulz
Ulrich Schättler
Francesca Bassani
Matthias Demuzere
Francesco Repola
spellingShingle Valeria Garbero
Massimo Milelli
Edoardo Bucchignani
Paola Mercogliano
Mikhail Varentsov
Inna Rozinkina
Gdaliy Rivin
Denis Blinov
Hendrik Wouters
Jan-Peter Schulz
Ulrich Schättler
Francesca Bassani
Matthias Demuzere
Francesco Repola
Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European Cities
Atmosphere
urban climate
urban heat island
UHI
COSMO
TERRA_URB
urban parametrization
author_facet Valeria Garbero
Massimo Milelli
Edoardo Bucchignani
Paola Mercogliano
Mikhail Varentsov
Inna Rozinkina
Gdaliy Rivin
Denis Blinov
Hendrik Wouters
Jan-Peter Schulz
Ulrich Schättler
Francesca Bassani
Matthias Demuzere
Francesco Repola
author_sort Valeria Garbero
title Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European Cities
title_short Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European Cities
title_full Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European Cities
title_fullStr Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European Cities
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European Cities
title_sort evaluating the urban canopy scheme terra_urb in the cosmo model for selected european cities
publisher MDPI AG
series Atmosphere
issn 2073-4433
publishDate 2021-02-01
description The increase in built surfaces constitutes the main reason for the formation of the Urban Heat Island (UHI), that is a metropolitan area significantly warmer than its surrounding rural areas. The urban heat islands and other urban-induced climate feedbacks may amplify heat stress and urban flooding under climate change and therefore to predict them correctly has become essential. Currently in the COSMO model, cities are represented by natural land surfaces with an increased surface roughness length and a reduced vegetation cover, but this approach is unable to correctly reproduce the UHI effect. By increasing the model resolution, a representation of the main physical processes that characterize the urban local meteorology should be addressed, in order to better forecast temperature, moisture and precipitation in urban environments. Within the COSMO Consortium a bulk parameterization scheme (TERRA_URB or TU) has been developed. It parametrizes the effects of buildings, streets and other man-made impervious surfaces on energy, moist and momentum exchanges between the surface and atmosphere, and additionally accounts for the anthropogenic heat flux as a heat source from the surface to the atmosphere. TU implements an impervious water-storage parameterization, and the Semi-empirical Urban canopy parametrization (SURY) that translates 3D urban canopy into bulk parameters. This paper presents evaluation results of the TU scheme in high-resolution simulations with a recent COSMO model version for selected European cities, namely Turin, Naples and Moscow. The key conclusion of the work is that the TU scheme in the COSMO model reasonably reproduces UHI effect and improves air temperature forecasts for all the investigated urban areas, despite each city has very different morphological characteristics. Our results highlight potential benefits of a new turbulence scheme and the representation of skin-layer temperature (for vegetation) in the model performance. Our model framework provides perspectives for enhancing urban climate modelling, although further investigations in improving model parametrizations, calibration and the use of more realistic urban canopy parameters are needed.
topic urban climate
urban heat island
UHI
COSMO
TERRA_URB
urban parametrization
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/12/2/237
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spelling doaj-8fe8e6b87f564327a7f3904d4bc328152021-02-10T00:06:45ZengMDPI AGAtmosphere2073-44332021-02-011223723710.3390/atmos12020237Evaluating the Urban Canopy Scheme TERRA_URB in the COSMO Model for Selected European CitiesValeria Garbero0Massimo Milelli1Edoardo Bucchignani2Paola Mercogliano3Mikhail Varentsov4Inna Rozinkina5Gdaliy Rivin6Denis Blinov7Hendrik Wouters8Jan-Peter Schulz9Ulrich Schättler10Francesca Bassani11Matthias Demuzere12Francesco Repola13Department of Meteorology, Climate and Air Quality, Arpa Piemonte, 10139 Turin, ItalyDepartment of Meteorology, Climate and Air Quality, Arpa Piemonte, 10139 Turin, ItalyCIRA-Centro Italiano Ricerche Aerospaziali, 81043 Capua, ItalyRegional Models and Geo-Hydrological Impacts (REMHI) Division, Fondazione Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici, 81100 Caserta, ItalyResearch Computing Center and Faculty of Geography, Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, RussiaResearch Computing Center and Faculty of Geography, Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, RussiaResearch Computing Center and Faculty of Geography, Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, RussiaHydrometeorologycal Research Centre of Russian Federation, 123376 Moscow, RussiaEnvironmental Modelling Unit, Flemish Institute for Technological Research, B-2400 Mol, BelgiumDeutsche Wetterdienst (German Meteorological Service), 63067 Offenbach am Main, GermanyDeutsche Wetterdienst (German Meteorological Service), 63067 Offenbach am Main, GermanyDepartment of Environment, Land and Infrastructure Engineering, Politecnico di Torino, 10129 Torino, Italy, ItalyDepartment of Geography, Ruhr-University Bochum, 44801 Bochum, GermanyRegional Models and Geo-Hydrological Impacts (REMHI) Division, Fondazione Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici, 81100 Caserta, ItalyThe increase in built surfaces constitutes the main reason for the formation of the Urban Heat Island (UHI), that is a metropolitan area significantly warmer than its surrounding rural areas. The urban heat islands and other urban-induced climate feedbacks may amplify heat stress and urban flooding under climate change and therefore to predict them correctly has become essential. Currently in the COSMO model, cities are represented by natural land surfaces with an increased surface roughness length and a reduced vegetation cover, but this approach is unable to correctly reproduce the UHI effect. By increasing the model resolution, a representation of the main physical processes that characterize the urban local meteorology should be addressed, in order to better forecast temperature, moisture and precipitation in urban environments. Within the COSMO Consortium a bulk parameterization scheme (TERRA_URB or TU) has been developed. It parametrizes the effects of buildings, streets and other man-made impervious surfaces on energy, moist and momentum exchanges between the surface and atmosphere, and additionally accounts for the anthropogenic heat flux as a heat source from the surface to the atmosphere. TU implements an impervious water-storage parameterization, and the Semi-empirical Urban canopy parametrization (SURY) that translates 3D urban canopy into bulk parameters. This paper presents evaluation results of the TU scheme in high-resolution simulations with a recent COSMO model version for selected European cities, namely Turin, Naples and Moscow. The key conclusion of the work is that the TU scheme in the COSMO model reasonably reproduces UHI effect and improves air temperature forecasts for all the investigated urban areas, despite each city has very different morphological characteristics. Our results highlight potential benefits of a new turbulence scheme and the representation of skin-layer temperature (for vegetation) in the model performance. Our model framework provides perspectives for enhancing urban climate modelling, although further investigations in improving model parametrizations, calibration and the use of more realistic urban canopy parameters are needed.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/12/2/237urban climateurban heat islandUHICOSMOTERRA_URBurban parametrization