Evaluation of 30 urban land surface models in the Urban‐PLUMBER project: Phase 1 results

IF 3 3区 地球科学 Q2 METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Pub Date : 2023-10-25 DOI:10.1002/qj.4589
Mathew J. Lipson, Sue Grimmond, Martin Best, Gab Abramowitz, Andrew Coutts, Nigel Tapper, Jong‐Jin Baik, Meiring Beyers, Lewis Blunn, Souhail Boussetta, Elie Bou‐Zeid, Martin G. De Kauwe, Cécile de Munck, Matthias Demuzere, Simone Fatichi, Krzysztof Fortuniak, Beom‐Soon Han, Margaret A. Hendry, Yukihiro Kikegawa, Hiroaki Kondo, Doo‐Il Lee, Sang‐Hyun Lee, Aude Lemonsu, Tiago Machado, Gabriele Manoli, Alberto Martilli, Valéry Masson, Joe McNorton, Naika Meili, David Meyer, Kerry A. Nice, Keith W. Oleson, Seung‐Bu Park, Michael Roth, Robert Schoetter, Andrés Simón‐Moral, Gert‐Jan Steeneveld, Ting Sun, Yuya Takane, Marcus Thatcher, Aristofanis Tsiringakis, Mikhail Varentsov, Chenghao Wang, Zhi‐Hua Wang, Andy J. Pitman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Accurately predicting weather and climate in cities is critical for safeguarding human health and strengthening urban resilience. Multimodel evaluations can lead to model improvements; however, there have been no major intercomparisons of urban‐focussed land surface models in over a decade. Here, in Phase 1 of the Urban‐PLUMBER project, we evaluate the ability of 30 land surface models to simulate surface energy fluxes critical to atmospheric meteorological and air quality simulations. We establish minimum and upper performance expectations for participating models using simple information‐limited models as benchmarks. Compared with the last major model intercomparison at the same site, we find broad improvement in the current cohort's predictions of short‐wave radiation, sensible and latent heat fluxes, but little or no improvement in long‐wave radiation and momentum fluxes. Models with a simple urban representation (e.g., ‘slab’ schemes) generally perform well, particularly when combined with sophisticated hydrological/vegetation models. Some mid‐complexity models (e.g., ‘canyon’ schemes) also perform well, indicating efforts to integrate vegetation and hydrology processes have paid dividends. The most complex models that resolve three‐dimensional interactions between buildings in general did not perform as well as other categories. However, these models also tended to have the simplest representations of hydrology and vegetation. Models without any urban representation (i.e., vegetation‐only land surface models) performed poorly for latent heat fluxes, and reasonably for other energy fluxes at this suburban site. Our analysis identified widespread human errors in initial submissions that substantially affected model performances. Although significant efforts are applied to correct these errors, we conclude that human factors are likely to influence results in this (or any) model intercomparison, particularly where participating scientists have varying experience and first languages. These initial results are for one suburban site, and future phases of Urban‐PLUMBER will evaluate models across 20 sites in different urban and regional climate zones.

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城市-水管工项目中30个城市地表模型的评估:第一阶段结果
准确预测城市天气和气候对于保障人类健康和增强城市抵御能力至关重要。多模型评价可导致模型改进;然而,在过去的十多年里,没有对以城市为中心的陆地表面模型进行重大的相互比较。在Urban - PLUMBER项目的第一阶段,我们评估了30种地表模式模拟地表能量通量的能力,地表能量通量对大气气象和空气质量模拟至关重要。我们使用简单的信息有限模型作为基准,建立了参与模型的最低和最高性能期望。与上次在同一地点进行的主要模式比对相比,我们发现当前序列对短波辐射、感热通量和潜热通量的预测有了很大的改善,但对长波辐射和动量通量的预测几乎没有改善。具有简单城市表示的模型(例如“平板”方案)通常表现良好,特别是与复杂的水文/植被模型结合使用时。一些中等复杂性模型(如“峡谷”模型)也表现良好,表明整合植被和水文过程的努力已经取得了成效。一般来说,解决建筑物之间三维相互作用的最复杂模型的表现不如其他类别。然而,这些模式也倾向于具有最简单的水文和植被表示。没有任何城市表征的模型(即仅植被地表模型)在潜热通量方面表现不佳,在该郊区站点的其他能量通量方面表现合理。我们的分析确定了在初始提交中广泛存在的人为错误,这些错误极大地影响了模型的性能。尽管我们付出了巨大的努力来纠正这些错误,但我们得出的结论是,人为因素可能会影响这种(或任何)模型相互比较的结果,特别是在参与的科学家有不同的经验和第一语言的情况下。这些初步结果是针对一个郊区站点的,Urban - PLUMBER的未来阶段将评估不同城市和区域气候区的20个站点的模型。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
16.80
自引率
4.50%
发文量
163
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society is a journal published by the Royal Meteorological Society. It aims to communicate and document new research in the atmospheric sciences and related fields. The journal is considered one of the leading publications in meteorology worldwide. It accepts articles, comprehensive review articles, and comments on published papers. It is published eight times a year, with additional special issues. The Quarterly Journal has a wide readership of scientists in the atmospheric and related fields. It is indexed and abstracted in various databases, including Advanced Polymers Abstracts, Agricultural Engineering Abstracts, CAB Abstracts, CABDirect, COMPENDEX, CSA Civil Engineering Abstracts, Earthquake Engineering Abstracts, Engineered Materials Abstracts, Science Citation Index, SCOPUS, Web of Science, and more.
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