
A New TKE‐Based Parameterization of Atmospheric Turbulence in the Canadian Global and Regional Climate Models
Author(s) -
He Y.,
McFarlane N. A.,
Monahan A. H.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of advances in modeling earth systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.03
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 1942-2466
DOI - 10.1029/2018ms001532
Subject(s) - turbulence , turbulence kinetic energy , environmental science , marine stratocumulus , meteorology , turbulence modeling , climate model , planetary boundary layer , convection , large eddy simulation , boundary layer , atmospheric sciences , mechanics , physics , geology , climate change , aerosol , oceanography
A new semi‐empirical turbulence parameterization is presented. Key features of the scheme include representation of turbulent diffusivities in terms of the turbulent kinetic energy that is determined by solving a quasi‐equilibrium form of the equation representing the turbulent kinetic energy budget. The new parameterization is innovative in the treatment of turbulent transfer in stably stratified conditions and the representation of nonlocal contributions to the vertical transport of heat, moisture, and scalar prognostic variables in convectively active boundary layers. A key element in the modeling of turbulence in stably stratified conditions is the formulation of the turbulent Prandtl number based on the results of recently published theoretical, modeling, and observational studies of stratified turbulence in the atmospheric boundary layer. The new parameterization has been implemented in the CanAM4 single column model. Its performance in comparison with that of the operational CanAM4 turbulence parameterization is documented in terms of selected results from case studies for clear‐sky conditions based on meteorological observations from the KNMI‐mast at Cabauw, Netherlands, and the Second Dynamics and Chemistry of Marine Stratocumulus case study of stratocumulus‐topped marine boundary layers. The performance of the new and operational schemes is qualitatively similar in clear‐sky conditions in both convective and stable boundary layer regimes. However, they perform differently for the extended simulations for the Second Dynamics and Chemistry of Marine Stratocumulus case study. The new scheme maintains an elevated stratocumulus layer throughout a 30‐hr simulation, but peak liquid water contents are larger than large eddy simulations.