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The role of the land surface in the climate system
April 2002
By Pedro Viterbo
European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
PARAMETRIZATION
Deep convection mass flux
General problem of parametrization
Land suface assimilation
Land surface processes
Linear gravity waves
Microwave radiation
Non-convective condensation
Orographic drag
Radiative transfer
Represenation of clouds
Role of land surface
Sensitivity of convection
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The role of the land surface in the climate system
By Pedro Viterbo (p.viterbo@ecmwf.int)
European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, Shinfield Park, Reading RG2 9AX, United Kingdom
Abstract
The role of the land surface in the climate system is illustrated, with a focus on recent experience at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). Global energy and water budgets are discussed and compared with their counterparts over the ocean, highlighting physical mechanisms responsible for their differences. Time scales associated with the global hydrological budget are presented. Using field data and model results, soil moisture is shown to be responsible for modulating the surface-atmosphere interaction at a continental scale, on time scales ranging from the diurnal to the seasonal. After a brief review of the impact of land surface on weather, three ECMWF case studies are presented where a more realistic representation of land surface was crucial for the performance of the forecast system. They correspond, respectively, to the role of soil moisture in determining the position and intensity of the precipitation maximum in an extreme event of mid-latitudes summer, the role of albedo of the snow in the presence of forests in spring and the effect of soil water freezing as a thermal regulator of the surface in cold climates. Finally, the evolution of the systematic errors in the ECMWF forecasts of near surface temperature and humidity is presented over the last ten years; a clear signature of changes to the representation of land surface processes (and other physical processes affecting the energy and water fluxes at the surface) can be found on that record.
Table of contents
1 . Introduction
2 . Surface energy and water budget
3 . Time scales and the role of soil moisture
3.1 Global time scales
3.2 The role of soil moisture
3.3 The interplay between the diurnal and the seasonal time scales
3.4 A schematic view of the role of land surface
4 . Impact of land surface on weather: A brief literature survey
5 . Examples from ECMWF recent experience
5.1 Soil moisture
5.2 Boreal forests
5.3 Soil water freezing: A regulator of cold climates
6 . Conclusions
References
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Copyright © 2002, ECMWF. All rights reserved.
12.06.2002
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