Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment

Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === The ability of the U.S. Navy's Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Mesoscale Prediction System (COAMPS) (Trademark) to accurately forecast the height and structure of the Marine Boundary Layer (MBL) in the coastal zone is analyzed and compared to...

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Main Author: Eleuterio, Daniel P.
Other Authors: Qing Wang
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/9928
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-99282015-03-06T15:57:33Z Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment Eleuterio, Daniel P. Qing Wang Meteorology Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited The ability of the U.S. Navy's Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Mesoscale Prediction System (COAMPS) (Trademark) to accurately forecast the height and structure of the Marine Boundary Layer (MBL) in the coastal zone is analyzed and compared to surface and aircraft observations from the Dynamics and Evolution of Coastal Stratus (DECS) field study conducted along the central coast of California from June 16 to July 22, 1999. The stratus field was found to have significant mesoscale variability within 100 km of the coast due to interaction between the mean flow and the coastal terrain. This structure is consistent with general hydraulic flow theory and the development of a low-level coastal jet. However, the specific characteristics on any given day were very sensitive to flow direction, inversion height, and synoptic conditions. With some modifications, the model predicted the general evolution of these events with qualitative fidelity, but was slow to dissipate the cloud and frequently produced surface fog versus stratus. A consistent tendency was found in the model's predictions of inversion heights 200-300 meters too low, weak inversion strengths, high integrated liquid water content, and weak buoyancy flux near the cloud top. These observed biases are consistent with underestimating the cloud top entrainment velocity and entrainment fluxes in the modeled boundary layer. An explicit entrainment parameterization was developed to better represent the sub-grid scale processes at cloud top and was tested in the single column and 3D versions of COAMPS. The entrainment parameterization was found to improve the boundary layer height and cloud liquid water content as compared to field observations, but the modeled boundary layer still exhibited a low bias, and the entrainment velocity was higher than is generally expected from field studies for this regime. (2 tables, 53 figures. 80 refs.) ANNOTATION: The Role of Cloud-Top Entrainment in Coastal Stratocumulus-Topped Boundary Layers. 2012-08-22T15:30:39Z 2012-08-22T15:30:39Z 2004-06 http://hdl.handle.net/10945/9928 This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === The ability of the U.S. Navy's Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Mesoscale Prediction System (COAMPS) (Trademark) to accurately forecast the height and structure of the Marine Boundary Layer (MBL) in the coastal zone is analyzed and compared to surface and aircraft observations from the Dynamics and Evolution of Coastal Stratus (DECS) field study conducted along the central coast of California from June 16 to July 22, 1999. The stratus field was found to have significant mesoscale variability within 100 km of the coast due to interaction between the mean flow and the coastal terrain. This structure is consistent with general hydraulic flow theory and the development of a low-level coastal jet. However, the specific characteristics on any given day were very sensitive to flow direction, inversion height, and synoptic conditions. With some modifications, the model predicted the general evolution of these events with qualitative fidelity, but was slow to dissipate the cloud and frequently produced surface fog versus stratus. A consistent tendency was found in the model's predictions of inversion heights 200-300 meters too low, weak inversion strengths, high integrated liquid water content, and weak buoyancy flux near the cloud top. These observed biases are consistent with underestimating the cloud top entrainment velocity and entrainment fluxes in the modeled boundary layer. An explicit entrainment parameterization was developed to better represent the sub-grid scale processes at cloud top and was tested in the single column and 3D versions of COAMPS. The entrainment parameterization was found to improve the boundary layer height and cloud liquid water content as compared to field observations, but the modeled boundary layer still exhibited a low bias, and the entrainment velocity was higher than is generally expected from field studies for this regime. (2 tables, 53 figures. 80 refs.) ANNOTATION: The Role of Cloud-Top Entrainment in Coastal Stratocumulus-Topped Boundary Layers.
author2 Qing Wang
author_facet Qing Wang
Eleuterio, Daniel P.
author Eleuterio, Daniel P.
spellingShingle Eleuterio, Daniel P.
Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment
author_sort Eleuterio, Daniel P.
title Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment
title_short Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment
title_full Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment
title_fullStr Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment
title_full_unstemmed Coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment
title_sort coastal stratocumulus topped boundary layers and the role of cloud-top entrainment
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/9928
work_keys_str_mv AT eleuteriodanielp coastalstratocumulustoppedboundarylayersandtheroleofcloudtopentrainment
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