
Improved Low-Cloud Simulation from the Community Atmosphere Model with an Advanced Third-Order Turbulence Closure
Author(s) -
Anning Cheng,
KuanMan Xu
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of climate
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.315
H-Index - 287
eISSN - 1520-0442
pISSN - 0894-8755
DOI - 10.1175/jcli-d-14-00776.1
Subject(s) - atmospheric sciences , environmental science , cloud forcing , liquid water content , shortwave , longwave , atmosphere (unit) , cloud albedo , climatology , climate model , radiative flux , radiative transfer , cloud cover , meteorology , geology , physics , climate change , cloud computing , oceanography , quantum mechanics , computer science , operating system
In this study, a simplified intermediately prognostic higher-order turbulence closure (IPHOC) is implemented in the Community Atmosphere Model, version 5 (CAM5), to provide a consistent treatment of subgrid-scale cloud processes, except for deep convection. The planetary boundary layer (PBL) height is prognosticated to better resolve the discontinuity of temperature and moisture above the PBL top. Single-column model tests show that fluxes of liquid water potential temperature and total water, cloud fraction, and liquid water content are improved with this approach. The simplified IPHOC package replaces the boundary layer dry and moist turbulence parameterizations, the shallow convection parameterization, and the liquid-phase part of the cloud macrophysics parameterization in CAM5. CAM5-IPHOC improves the simulation of the low-level clouds off the west coasts of continents and the storm track region in the Southern Hemisphere (SH). The transition from stratocumulus to cumulus clouds is more gradual. There are also improvements on the cloud radiative forcing, especially shortwave, in the subsidence regime. The improvements in the relationships among low cloud amount, surface relative humidity, lower tropospheric stability, and PBL depth are seen in some stratocumulus regions. CAM5-IPHOC, however, produces weaker precipitation at the South Pacific convergence zone than CAM5 because of less energy flux into the SH atmosphere. The more downward surface shortwave radiative cooling and the less top-of-the-atmosphere longwave cloud radiative heating in the SH relative to the Northern Hemisphere explains the anomalous cooling and the lesser energy flux into the SH, which is related to the underestimate of extratropical middle/high clouds in the SH.