F. Couvreux (1), F. Guichard (1), J.-L. Redelsperger (1), C. Kiemle (2), V. Masson (1), J.-P. Lafore (1) and C. Flamant (3)
(1) Centre national de recherches météorologiques–Météo-France
and centre national de recherche scientifique, France
(2) Institut Pierre Simon Laplace/service d’aéronomie,
France
(3) Deutsche zentrum für luft- und raumfahrt/institut für
physik der atmosphäre, Germany
Q. J. R. Meteorol. Soc., 2005, vol. 131, pp. 2665–2693 [doi: 10.1256/qj.04.167]
Summary : This study presents a comprehensive analysis of the
variability of water vapour in a growing convective boundary-layer (CBL)
over land, highlighting the complex links between advection, convective
activity and moisture heterogeneity in the boundary layer. A Large-eddy
Simulation (LES) is designed, based on observations, and validated, using
an independent data-set collected during the International H2O Project
(IHOP_2002) field experiment.
Ample information about the moisture distribution in space and time,
as well as other important CBL parameters are acquired by mesonet stations,
balloon soundings, instruments on-board two aircraft and the DLR airborne
water-vapour differential-absorption lidar. Because it can deliver two-dimensional
cross-sections at high spatial resolution (140 m horizontal, 200 m vertical),
the airborne lidar offers valuable insights of small-scale moisture-variability
throughout the CBL.
The LES is able to reproduce the development of the CBL in the morning
and early afternoon, as assessed by comparisons of simulated mean profiles
of key meteorological variables with sounding data. Simulated profiles
of the variance of water-vapour mixing-ratio were found to be in good agreement
with the lidar-derived counterparts. Finally, probability-density functions
of potential temperature, vertical velocity and water-vapour mixing-ratio
calculated from the LES show great consistency with those derived from
aircraft in situ measurements in the middle of the CBL.
The observed water-vapour variability exhibits contributions from different
scales. The influence of the mesoscale (larger than LES domain size, i.e.
10 km) on the smaller-scale variability is assessed using LES and observations.
The small-scale variability of water vapour is found to be important and
to be driven by the dynamics of the CBL. Both lidar observations and LES
evidence that dry downdraughts entrained from above the CBL are governing
the scale of moisture variability. Characteristic length-scales are found
to be larger for water-vapour mixing-ratio than for temperature and vertical
velocity. In particular, intrusions of drier free-troposphere air from
above the growing CBL impose a marked negative skewness on the water-vapour
distribution within it, both as observed and in the simulation.
keywords : heterogeneities - high-resolution simulations - humidity
- lidar data