Title: Cascade
1Cascade
- Scale interactions and organized convection in
the tropical atmosphere - Project Manager Steve Woolnough
2Outline
- Motivation
- Examples of scale interactions in organized
tropical convection - Scientific and Technical Challenges
- Cascade Project
- The Science of Cascade
- Project Structure
3Organization of tropical convection
- Tropical convection is organized across a wide
range of scales associated with - Individual cloud systems
- Squall lines and mesoscale convective complexes
- African Easterly Waves, Tropical Cyclones,
Equatorial Waves - Madden-Julian Oscillation, Monsoon circulations
4Interactions between space and time scales of
tropical convection
5Mean Climate over the Maritime Continent
- Precipitation over the Maritime Continent plays a
dominant role in driving the circulation over the
Indo-Pacific Warm Pool - Modelled precipitation shows dry bias around the
islands of the Maritime Continent - Large wet biases in Western Indian Ocean and West
Pacific - Wet biases over the islands of the Maritime
Continent
CMAP
HadGAM1
Difference
From Jane Strachan (Walker Institute)
6Diurnal Cycle in the Maritime Continent
- Observations from TRMM
- Strong diurnal cycle in precipitation
- Little or no precipitation over land during
morning - Precipitation develops over land in late
afternoon and into the late evening - Precipitation moves out over ocean during early
hours of the morning - Convection in the Maritime Continent is strongly
influenced by diurnal cycle and land-sea breezes
From Jane Strachan (Walker Institute)
7Diurnal Cycle of Precipitation in HadGAM1
- Maximum precipitation over land during morning
- Precipitation dies out over land in late
afternoon - Little or no precipitation over seas around
Maritime Continent - Do weaknesses in the representation of key
physical phenomena in the model impact the mean
climate of the region?
1230LT
1830LT
0030LT
0630LT
From Jane Strachan (Walker Institute)
8Organization of convection by equatorial waves
- Observations (e.g. Wheeler and Kiladis 1999, Yang
et al. 2003) show convection is organized by
large-scale equatorial waves
from Wheeler and Kiladis (J. Atmos. Sci, 1999)
9Equatorial Waves in HadGAM
Observed
HadGAM1
- By what processes are the convection and dynamics
coupled? - How does the model represent these processes?
10MJO in Climate Models
- Lin et al. (J. Clim, 2006) (CGCMs)
- MJO variance approaches observed value in only 2
of 14 models - Ratio of eastward to westward variance is too
small, consistent with lack of coherent eastward
propagation - Variance in 13 of 14 models not associated with
pronounced spectral peak.
11Multiscale Organization in the MJO
- Eastward propagating envelope of convection
- Short lived, westward propagating systems within
envelope - With individual mesoscale cloud systems embedded
within them
from Chen et al. (J. Atmos. Sci, 1996)
from Rickenbach Rutledge (J. Atmos. Sci, 1998)
12Multiscale Organization in the MJO
- What role do the different scales of organization
play in the transports of heat, moisture and
momentum by the convection? - How are these processes represented within
conventional parametrization schemes?
13Organized Convection in AEWs
12Z
- Complex organization on synoptic and meso-scales
- Strong temporal development linked to diurnal
cycle - Triggering of convection by orography and
convergence along cold pools
15Z
18Z
14Scientific Technical Challenges
- How does convection organise itself across a
range of time and space scales? - How are energy and momentum transferred?
- Why do preferred structures emerge?
- How can these be represented in global models?
- But we cannot answer these questions using
observations - so we must use models as pseudo
field experiments. - This requires large domains and very high
resolution so that the energy spectrum is not
compromised. - Needs very significant computational resource,
only just becoming available.
15Cascade Project
- Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC)
Funded Consortium Project - Walker Institute, University of Reading
- National Centre for Atmospheric Science
- University of Leeds
- University of East Anglia
- Met Office
- 3½ year project which started on 1st October 2007
16Proposal
- Develop modelling framework for large domain
(100? longitude by 30? latitude), high
resolution (1-2 km) simulations. - Perform numerical case studies of organised
convection over West Africa and the Indo-Pacific
Warm Pool. - Evaluate these simulations using advanced
satellite and in situ observations of cloud
structures. - Analyse the simulations in terms of
scale-dependent energy and momentum budgets. - Use idealised case studies to explore the links
between convection and equatorial wave modes. - Bring this new understanding into the development
of new representations of tropical convection for
global weather and climate models.
17Project Structure
- WP1 Development of Modelling Tools and
Infrastructure - WP2 Scale interactions in African Weather
Systems - WP3 Organized Convection over the Indian Ocean
and West Pacific Warm Pool - WP4 Model Evaluation against Observations
- WP5 Synthesis of Results
18Development of Modelling Tools and Infrastructure
- Model Development (Met Office)
- Met Office Unified Model
- Build on existing work in the Met Office to
develop 1km resolution LAM for use as forecasting
tool and CRM research tool - Includes options for
- 3D turbulence scheme
- 5 phase microphysics scheme
- Test small domain case studies
- Modelling Infrastructure (Lois Steenman Clark,
NCAS CMS) - Optimatization
- Scalability
- Performance of I/O
- Management of TB of data
19Simulations of the diurnal cycle and land-sea
breezes over the Tiwi Islands in the Timor Sea
Evidence of modelling capability Realistic
physical-dynamical coupling in 1 km version of
the Unified Model
20Simulations of the diurnal cycle and land-sea
breezes over the Tiwi Islands in the Timor Sea
Evidence of model skill Good agreement with
radar observations
21Scale Interactions in African Weather Systems
- Diurnal Cycle of Convection (Tony Slingo, Walker
Institute) - What mechanisms control the organization of
convection by the diurnal cycle over varying land
surface conditions and forcing regimes typical of
North Africa? - MCSs and AEWs (Doug Parker, U of Leeds)
- What is the role of MCSs, particular those forced
by the diurnal cycle, in the dynamics of the
regional and synoptic waves and vortices over
Africa?
22Organized Convection in the Indo-Pacific Warm
Pool
- Scale Interactions in the MJO (Steve Woolnough,
Walker Institute) - How do the vertical heating profiles and momentum
transports associated with convection influence
the evolution of the MJO? - The diurnal cycle and the climate of the Maritime
Continent (Adrian Matthews, UEA) - What role do the diurnal cycle and land-sea
breezes play in determining the mean climate of
the Maritime Continent?
23Organized Convection in the Warm Pool
- Idealized Simulations of organized convection and
equatorial waves (Brian Hoskins, Mike Blackburn,
Walker Institute) - How is convection organized by equatorial waves
and how does it modify the structures predicted
by the dry theory?
24Case Study Methodology
- Use the high resolution simulations as
pseudo-observations to investigate - the energy and momentum budgets associated with
organized convection - the interactions between the various scales of
organization - Compare with low resolution simulations to
identify weaknesses and missing processes in
convection parametrization schemes
25Model Evaluation against Advanced Observations
- (Robin Hogan,
Walker Institute) - Use geostationary Satellites to evaluate temporal
development of organized cloud clusters - Use CloudSat, CALIPSO, and surface ARM sites to
evaluate vertical structure of clouds
26Synthesis of Results
-
(Met Office) - Review the results from a parametrization
perspective including - role of organized convection
- Environmental influences on organization
- Temporal evolution of convection
- Test new parametrization ideas in low resolution
simulations of case studies
27Project Timeline