Estimation of the ocean/atmosphere boundary layer height of water vapor from space

Author(s):  
C.S. Ruf ◽  
S.E. Beus
2009 ◽  
Vol 137 (1) ◽  
pp. 414-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Couvreux ◽  
F. Guichard ◽  
P. H. Austin ◽  
F. Chen

Abstract Mesoscale water vapor heterogeneities in the boundary layer are studied within the context of the International H2O Project (IHOP_2002). A significant portion of the water vapor variability in the IHOP_2002 occurs at the mesoscale, with the spatial pattern and the magnitude of the variability changing from day to day. On 14 June 2002, an atypical mesoscale gradient is observed, which is the reverse of the climatological gradient over this area. The factors causing this water vapor variability are investigated using complementary platforms (e.g., aircraft, satellite, and in situ) and models. The impact of surface flux heterogeneities and atmospheric variability are evaluated separately using a 1D boundary layer model, which uses surface fluxes from the High-Resolution Land Data Assimilation System (HRLDAS) and early-morning atmospheric temperature and moisture profiles from a mesoscale model. This methodology, based on the use of robust modeling components, allows the authors to tackle the question of the nature of the observed mesoscale variability. The impact of horizontal advection is inferred from a careful analysis of available observations. By isolating the individual contributions to mesoscale water vapor variability, it is shown that the observed moisture variability cannot be explained by a single process, but rather involves a combination of different factors: the boundary layer height, which is strongly controlled by the surface buoyancy flux, the surface latent heat flux, the early-morning heterogeneity of the atmosphere, horizontal advection, and the radiative impact of clouds.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Zou ◽  
Jianning Sun ◽  
Zixuan Xiang ◽  
Xiaomen Han ◽  
Qiuji Ding

<p>At the end of November 2018, a heavy air pollution event was recorded by many meteorological stations in the Yangtze River Delta (YRD), China. The local PM2.5 concentration exceeding to 200 µg m<sup>-3</sup>. This is the heaviest, longest and most widespread heavy-polluted weather in Jiangsu Province since 2018. Meanwhile, there has been severe foggy weather in Jiangsu Province, with visibility less than 200 meters in most parts of the province. In order to study the interaction between PM2.5 concentration and boundary layer height in the haze event, and the effect of fog on pollutant aggregation, the boundary layer structure of the continuous haze process was analyzed by using the SORPES Observation of Nanjing University's Xianlin Campus. The results of the analysis show that:<br>1, The PM2.5 concentration in the boundary layer is inversely correlated with the boundary layer height, the higher the PM2.5 concentration, the lower the boundary layer height during the day. By absorbing and scattering solar radiation, atmospheric aerosols affect the balance of surface energy and reduce the sensitive heat flux, thereby inhibiting the development of the boundary layer. While inhibited development of the boundary layer will limit the diffusion of atmospheric aerosols, thereby increasing the concentration of atmospheric aerosols in the boundary layer. In addition, nocturnal atmospheric aerosols absorb heat, leading to strong grounding inversion temperature the next day, further inhibiting the development of the daytime boundary layer. <br>2, The fog-top inversion is very strong, far stronger than the inversion caused by atmospheric aerosols. Therefore, the heights of the boundary layer of fog days are much lower than that of non-fog days under the same pollution conditions.<br>3, During the fog, the PM2.5 concentration significantly reduced. And after the fog dissipated, due to the sun, the air moisture evaporation, PM2.5 concentration quickly reverted to the pre-fog state. Fog has limited wet removal of PM2.5.<br>4, Fog can inhibit the development of the boundary layer, with the continuation of the fog process, the pollution in the boundary layer continues to increase. At the same time, due to the inhibition of the development of the boundary layer, the diffusion of water vapor in the air is also affected, resulting in the boundary layer water vapor content is always in a high state, thus promoting the production of fog.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 469-478 ◽  
Author(s):  
Da Yang

Abstract Organized rainstorms and their associated overturning circulations can self-emerge over an ocean surface with uniform temperature in cloud-resolving simulations. This phenomenon is referred to as convective self-aggregation. Convective self-aggregation is argued to be an important building block for tropical weather systems and may help regulate tropical atmospheric humidity and thereby tropical climate stability. Here the author presents a boundary layer theory for the horizontal scale λ of 2D (x, z) convective self-aggregation by considering both the momentum and energy constraints for steady circulations. This theory suggests that λ scales with the product of the boundary layer height h and the square root of the amplitude of density variation between aggregated moist and dry regions in the boundary layer, and that this density variation mainly arises from the moisture variation due to the virtual effect of water vapor. This theory predicts the following: 1) the order of magnitude of λ is ~2000 km, 2) the aspect ratio of the boundary layer λ/h increases with surface warming, and 3) λ decreases when the virtual effect of water vapor is disabled. These predictions are confirmed using a suite of cloud-resolving simulations spanning a wide range of climates.


2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (12) ◽  
pp. 1204009
Author(s):  
储玉飞 Chu Yufei ◽  
刘东 Liu Dong ◽  
吴德成 Wu Decheng ◽  
王英俭 Wang Yingjian

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ting Yang ◽  
Zifa Wang ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Alex Gbaguidi ◽  
Nubuo Sugimoto ◽  
...  

Abstract. Predicting air pollution events in low atmosphere over megacities requires thorough understanding of the tropospheric dynamic and chemical processes, involving notably, continuous and accurate determination of the boundary layer height (BLH). Through intensive observations experimented over Beijing (China), and an exhaustive evaluation existing algorithms applied to the BLH determination, persistent critical limitations are noticed, in particular over polluted episodes. Basically, under weak thermal convection with high aerosol loading, none of the retrieval algorithms is able to fully capture the diurnal cycle of the BLH due to pollutant insufficient vertical mixing in the boundary layer associated with the impact of gravity waves on the tropospheric structure. Subsequently, a new approach based on gravity wave theory (the cubic root gradient method: CRGM), is developed to overcome such weakness and accurately reproduce the fluctuations of the BLH under various atmospheric pollution conditions. Comprehensive evaluation of CRGM highlights its high performance in determining BLH from Lidar. In comparison with the existing retrieval algorithms, the CRGM potentially reduces related computational uncertainties and errors from BLH determination (strong increase of correlation coefficient from 0.44 to 0.91 and significant decrease of the root mean square error from 643 m to 142 m). Such newly developed technique is undoubtedly expected to contribute to improve the accuracy of air quality modelling and forecasting systems.


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