Impact of frozen soil processes on soil thermal characteristics at seasonal to decadal scales over the Tibetan Plateau and North China
<p>Frozen soil processes are of great importance in controlling surface water and energy balances during the cold season and in cold regions. Over recent decades, considerable frozen soil degradation and surface soil warming have been reported over the Tibetan Plateau and North China, but most...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2021-04-01
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Series: | Hydrology and Earth System Sciences |
Online Access: | https://hess.copernicus.org/articles/25/2089/2021/hess-25-2089-2021.pdf |
Summary: | <p>Frozen soil processes are of great importance in
controlling surface water and energy balances during the cold season and in
cold regions. Over recent decades, considerable frozen soil degradation and
surface soil warming have been reported over the Tibetan Plateau and North
China, but most land surface models have difficulty in capturing the
freeze–thaw cycle, and few validations focus on the effects of frozen soil processes on soil thermal characteristics in these regions. This paper
addresses these issues by introducing a physically more realistic and
computationally more stable and efficient frozen soil module (FSM) into a
land surface model – the third-generation Simplified Simple Biosphere Model (SSiB3-FSM). To overcome the difficulties in achieving stable numerical
solutions for frozen soil, a new semi-implicit scheme and a physics-based
freezing–thawing scheme were applied to solve the governing equations. The performance of this model as well as the effects of frozen soil process on
the soil temperature profile and soil thermal characteristics were investigated over the Tibetan Plateau and North China using observation
sites from the China Meteorological Administration and models from 1981 to 2005. Results show that the SSiB3 model with the FSM produces a more realistic soil
temperature profile and its seasonal variation than that without FSM during
the freezing and thawing periods. The freezing process in soil delays the
winter cooling, while the thawing process delays the summer warming. The
time lag and amplitude damping of temperature become more pronounced with
increasing depth. These processes are well simulated in SSiB3-FSM. The
freeze–thaw processes could increase the simulated phase lag days and land memory at different soil depths as well as the soil memory change with the soil thickness. Furthermore, compared with observations, SSiB3-FSM produces
a realistic change in maximum frozen soil depth at decadal scales. This study shows that the soil thermal characteristics at seasonal to decadal scales
over frozen ground can be greatly improved in SSiB3-FSM, and SSiB3-FSM can be used as an effective model for TP and NC simulation during cold season. Overall, this study could help understand the vertical soil thermal
characteristics over the frozen ground and provide an important scientific
basis for land–atmosphere interactions.</p> |
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ISSN: | 1027-5606 1607-7938 |