Diagnosing Nonlocal Vertical Acceleration in Moist Convection Using a Large-Eddy Simulation

IF 4.4 2区 地球科学 Q1 METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems Pub Date : 2025-02-26 DOI:10.1029/2024MS004636
Fu-Sheng Kao, Yi-Hung Kuo, Chien-Ming Wu
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Abstract

The anelastic theory of effective buoyancy has been generalized to include effects of momentum flux convergence, and has suggested that the dynamics—mediated by the nonlocal perturbation pressure—tends to average over forcing details, yielding vertical acceleration robust to small-scale variations of the flow. Here we aim to substantiate this theoretical assertion through examining a large-eddy simulation (LES) with a 100-m horizontal grid spacing. Specifically, instances of convection in the LES are identified. For these, the buoyancy and dynamic contributions to the vertical momentum tendency are separately diagnosed, and their sensitivity resulting from averaging over sub-cloud-scale features quantified. In the absence of a background shear or vorticity, both buoyancy and vertical momentum flux convergence are the leading effect in the vertical acceleration while the influence of the horizontal momentum flux convergence on the vertical motion appears to be substantially weaker. For deep-convective cases, these contributions at the cloud scale ( 8 ${\sim} 8$  km) exhibit a robustness, as measured in a root-mean-square sense, to horizontally smoothing out turbulent features of scales 3 $\lesssim 3$  km. As expected, such scales depend on the size of the convective element of interest, while dynamic contributions tend to be more susceptible to horizontal smoothing than does the buoyancy contribution. We thus argue that including the anelastic nonlocal dynamics can help capture the evolution of convective-cloud-scale flows without fully resolving the finer-scale turbulent features embedded in the flow. Results here lend support to simplifying the subgrid-scale representation of moist convection for global climate models and storm-resolving simulations.

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Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES-
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
11.80%
发文量
241
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems (JAMES) is committed to advancing the science of Earth systems modeling by offering high-quality scientific research through online availability and open access licensing. JAMES invites authors and readers from the international Earth systems modeling community. Open access. Articles are available free of charge for everyone with Internet access to view and download. Formal peer review. Supplemental material, such as code samples, images, and visualizations, is published at no additional charge. No additional charge for color figures. Modest page charges to cover production costs. Articles published in high-quality full text PDF, HTML, and XML. Internal and external reference linking, DOI registration, and forward linking via CrossRef.
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