Average seasonal air temperature trends in the atmospheric boundary layer over the Siberian region

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia Y. Lomakina ◽  
Andrey V. Lavrinenko
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annu Panwar ◽  
Axel Kleidon

<p>The diurnal variations of surface and air temperature are related but their different responses to evaporative conditions can inform us about land-atmosphere interactions, extreme events, and their response to global change. Here, we evaluate the sensitivity of the diurnal ranges of surface (DT<sub>s</sub>R) and air (DT<sub>a</sub>R) temperature to evaporative fraction, across short vegetation, savanna, and forests at 106 Fluxnet observational sites and in the ERA5 global reanalysis. We show that the sensitivity of DT<sub>s</sub>R to evaporative fraction depends on vegetation type, whereas for DT<sub>a</sub>R it does not. Using FLUXNET data we found that on days with low evaporative fraction, DT<sub>s</sub>R is enhanced by up to 20 °C (30 °C in ERA5) in short vegetation, whereas only by 8 °C (10 °C in ERA5) in forests. Particularly, in short vegetation, ERA5 shows stronger responses, which is attributable to a negative bias on days with the high evaporative fraction. ERA5 also tends to have lower shortwave and longwave radiation input when compared to FLUXNET data. Contrary to DT<sub>s</sub>R, DT<sub>a</sub>R responds rather similarly to evaporative fraction irrespective of vegetation type (8 °C in FLUXNET, 10 °C in ERA5). To explain this, we show that the DT<sub>a</sub>R response to the evaporative fraction is compensated for differences in atmospheric boundary layer height by up to 2000 m, which is similar across vegetation types. We demonstrate this with a simple boundary layer heat storage calculation, indicating that DT<sub>a</sub>R is primarily shaped by changes in boundary layer heat storage whereas DT<sub>s</sub>R mainly responds to solar radiation, evaporation, and vegetation.  Our study reveals some systematic biases in ERA5 that need to be considered when using its temperature products for understanding land-atmosphere interactions or extreme events. To conclude, this study demonstrates the importance of vegetation and the dynamics of the atmospheric boundary layer in regulating diurnal variations in surface and air temperature under different evaporative conditions.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Tajfar ◽  
S. M. Bateni ◽  
S. A. Margulis ◽  
P. Gentine ◽  
T. Auligne

AbstractA number of studies have used time series of air temperature and specific humidity observations to estimate turbulent heat fluxes. These studies require the specification of surface roughness lengths for heat and momentum (that are directly related to the neutral bulk heat transfer coefficient CHN) and/or ground heat flux, which are often unavailable. In this study, sequences of air temperature and specific humidity are assimilated into an atmospheric boundary layer model within a variational data assimilation (VDA) framework to estimate CHN, evaporative fraction (EF), turbulent heat fluxes, and atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) height, potential temperature, and humidity. The developed VDA approach needs neither the surface roughness parameterization (as it is optimized by the VDA approach) nor ground heat flux measurements. The VDA approach is tested over the First International Satellite Land Surface Climatology Project Field Experiment (FIFE) site in the summers of 1987 and 1988. The results indicate that the estimated sensible and latent heat fluxes agree fairly well with the corresponding measurements. For FIFE 1987 (1988), the daily sensible and latent heat fluxes estimates have a root-mean-square error of 25.72 W m−2 (27.77 W m−2) and 53.63 W m−2 (48.22 W m−2), respectively. In addition, the ABL height, specific humidity, and potential temperature estimates from the VDA system are in good agreement with those inferred from the radiosondes both in terms of magnitude and diurnal trend.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey P. Kamardin ◽  
Irina V. Nevzorova ◽  
Sergey L. Odintsov

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