2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10546-018-0341-y
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The Impact of Three-Dimensional Effects on the Simulation of Turbulence Kinetic Energy in a Major Alpine Valley

Abstract: The correct simulation of the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) is crucial for reliable weather forecasts in truly complex terrain. However, common assumptions for model parametrizations are only valid for horizontally homogeneous and flat terrain. Here, we evaluate the turbulence parametrization of the numerical weather prediction model COSMO with a horizontal grid spacing of for the Inn Valley, Austria. The long-term, high-resolution turbulence measurements of the i-Box measurement sites provide a… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…As a result, these thermally driven flows strongly influence the evolution of the atmospheric boundary layer at the foothill areas, departing from the idealized behaviour observed over flat regions (Goger et al ; Serafin et al ). Wind speed and direction have a clear diurnal cycle due to the influence of the thermally driven winds, with winds veering from an upslope to a downslope direction close to sunset, depending on the site (Banta et al ; Chrust et al ; Martínez‐Villagrasa et al ; Jiménez and Cuxart, ; Giovannini et al ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…As a result, these thermally driven flows strongly influence the evolution of the atmospheric boundary layer at the foothill areas, departing from the idealized behaviour observed over flat regions (Goger et al ; Serafin et al ). Wind speed and direction have a clear diurnal cycle due to the influence of the thermally driven winds, with winds veering from an upslope to a downslope direction close to sunset, depending on the site (Banta et al ; Chrust et al ; Martínez‐Villagrasa et al ; Jiménez and Cuxart, ; Giovannini et al ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The model experiences some difficulties in reproducing the vertical temperature gradient close to the surface (Figure ). This is a well‐known limitation of mesoscale models (Jiménez et al ), and it is related not only to the coarse vertical resolution but also to the poor representation of the physical processes that take place in the surface layer under stably stratified conditions (Zhong and Fast, ; Jiménez and Cuxart, ), especially in complex terrain regions (Goger et al ; Serafin et al ). At higher levels, above the surface temperature inversion the model results are closer to the observations than at lower levels, suggesting that the model limitations are more linked to the parameterizations (surface model and turbulent scheme) than to the model resolution (Zhong and Fast, ).…”
Section: The Atmospheric Boundary Layer In Lannemezan During the Selementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rotach et al ). On the other hand, the presence of a (tall) plant canopy modifies the boundary layer (BL) near the surface in a specific way through aerodynamic drag imposed on the flow and by turbulent motions created in wakes of a plant element, thus adding further terms to the balance of TKE (Raupach and Shaw, ; Dwyer et al ; Goger et al ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(). The turbulence closure in COSMO (COnsortium for Small‐Scale MOdelling: Baldauf et al ., ) mesoscale model also has been tested in the frame of the GABLS programme (Buzzi et al ., ) and recently in a study in complex terrain for the Inn Valley in Austria (Goger et al ., ). An investigation of the budget terms and production mechanism of turbulent kinetic energy in complex terrain was performed by Weigel et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The prediction of turbulent kinetic energy in the operational configuration of the Fifth-Generation Penn State/National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) Mesoscale Model, (MM5: Dudhia, 1993) and WRF models, for their use in dispersion modelling suites, has been evaluated in Hanna et al (2010). The turbulence closure in COSMO (COnsortium for Small-Scale MOdelling: Baldauf et al, 2011) mesoscale model also has been tested in the frame of the GABLS programme and recently in a study in complex terrain for the Inn Valley in Austria (Goger et al, 2018). An investigation of the budget terms and production mechanism of turbulent kinetic energy in complex terrain was performed by Weigel et al (2007) with the Advanced Regional Prediction System model (ARPS: Xue et al, 2000), based on observations from the Mesoscale Alpine Programme (MAP)-Riviera Project (Rotach et al, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%