scholarly journals Supplementary material to "Near-surface thermal stratification during summer at Summit, Greenland, and its relation to MODIS-derived surface temperatures"

Author(s):  
Alden C. Adolph ◽  
Mary R. Albert ◽  
Dorothy K. Hall
Author(s):  
Lena Pfister ◽  
Karl Lapo ◽  
Larry Mahrt ◽  
Christoph K. Thomas

AbstractIn the stable boundary layer, thermal submesofronts (TSFs) are detected during the Shallow Cold Pool experiment in the Colorado plains, Colorado, USA in 2012. The topography induces TSFs by forming two different air layers converging on the valley-side wall while being stacked vertically above the valley bottom. The warm-air layer is mechanically generated by lee turbulence that consistently elevates near-surface temperatures, while the cold-air layer is thermodynamically driven by radiative cooling and the corresponding cold-air drainage decreases near-surface temperatures. The semi-stationary TSFs can only be detected, tracked, and investigated in detail when using fibre-optic distributed sensing (FODS), as point observations miss TSFs most of the time. Neither the occurrence of TSFs nor the characteristics of each air layer are connected to a specific wind or thermal regime. However, each air layer is characterized by a specific relationship between the wind speed and the friction velocity. Accordingly, a single threshold separating different flow regimes within the boundary layer is an oversimplification, especially during the occurrence of TSFs. No local forcings or their combination could predict the occurrence of TSFs except that they are less likely to occur during stronger near-surface or synoptic-scale flow. While classical conceptualizations and techniques of the boundary layer fail in describing the formation of TSFs, the use of spatially continuous data obtained from FODS provide new insights. Future studies need to incorporate spatially continuous data in the horizontal and vertical planes, in addition to classic sensor networks of sonic anemometry and thermohygrometers to fully characterize and describe boundary-layer phenomena.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Materia ◽  
Constantin Ardilouze ◽  
Chloé Prodhomme ◽  
Markus G. Donat ◽  
Marianna Benassi ◽  
...  

AbstractLand surface and atmosphere are interlocked by the hydrological and energy cycles and the effects of soil water-air coupling can modulate near-surface temperatures. In this work, three paired experiments were designed to evaluate impacts of different soil moisture initial and boundary conditions on summer temperatures in the Mediterranean transitional climate regime region. In this area, evapotranspiration is not limited by solar radiation, rather by soil moisture, which therefore controls the boundary layer variability. Extremely dry, extremely wet and averagely humid ground conditions are imposed to two global climate models at the beginning of the warm and dry season. Then, sensitivity experiments, where atmosphere is alternatively interactive with and forced by land surface, are launched. The initial soil state largely affects summer near-surface temperatures: dry soils contribute to warm the lower atmosphere and exacerbate heat extremes, while wet terrains suppress thermal peaks, and both effects last for several months. Land-atmosphere coupling proves to be a fundamental ingredient to modulate the boundary layer state, through the partition between latent and sensible heat fluxes. In the coupled runs, early season heat waves are sustained by interactive dry soils, which respond to hot weather conditions with increased evaporative demand, resulting in longer-lasting extreme temperatures. On the other hand, when wet conditions are prescribed across the season, the occurrence of hot days is suppressed. The land surface prescribed by climatological precipitation forcing causes a temperature drop throughout the months, due to sustained evaporation of surface soil water. Results have implications for seasonal forecasts on both rain-fed and irrigated continental regions in transitional climate zones.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin H. Hills ◽  
Joel T. Harper ◽  
Toby W. Meierbachtol ◽  
Jesse V. Johnson ◽  
Neil F. Humphrey ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Regula Frauenfelder ◽  
Ketil Isaksen ◽  
Jeannette Nötzli ◽  
Matthew J. Lato

Abstract. In June 2008, a rockslide detached in the northeast facing slope of Polvartinden, a high-alpine mountain in Signaldalen, Northern Norway. Here, we report on the observed and modelled past and present near-surface temperature regime close to the failure zone, as well as on a subsequent simulation of the subsurface temperature regime, and on initial geomechanical mapping based on laser scanning. The volume of the rockslide was estimated to be approximately 500 000 m3. The depth to the actual failure surface was found to range from 40 m at the back of the failure zone to 0 m at its toe. Visible in-situ ice was observed in the failure zone just after the rockslide. Between September 2009 and August 2013 ground surface temperatures were measured with miniature temperature data loggers at fourteen different localities close to the original failure zone along the northern ridge of Polvartinden, and in the valley floor. The results from these measurements and from a basic three-dimensional heat conduction model suggest that the lower altitudinal limit of permafrost at present is at 600–650 m a.s.l., which corresponds to the upper limit of the failure zone. A coupling of our in-situ data with regional climate data since 1958 suggests a general gradual warming and that a period with highest mean near surface temperatures on record ended four months before the Signaldalen rockslide detached. A comparison with a transient permafrost model run at 10 m depth, representative for areas where snow accumulates, strengthen this findings, which are also in congruence with measurements in nearby permafrost boreholes. It is likely that permafrost in and near the failure zone is presently subject to degradation. This degradation, in combination with the extreme warm year antecedent to the rock failure, is seen to have played an important role in the detaching of the Signaldalen rockslide.


2007 ◽  
Vol 44 (11) ◽  
pp. 1503-1515 ◽  
Author(s):  
S V Kokelj ◽  
M FJ Pisaric ◽  
C R Burn

Ice wedges are presently inactive in white spruce (Picea glauca) forests of eastern Mackenzie Delta as shown by the absence of vein ice above ice wedges, the maintenance of intact breaking cables, and the abundance of rootlets propagating across ridge–trough sequences. At spruce forest sites, near-surface ground cooling rates and minimum near-surface temperatures from the years 2003–2005 were above ice-wedge cracking thresholds. Ground thermal conditions associated with cracking were recorded at a tundra peatland with active ice wedges. Annual mean permafrost temperatures at the spruce forest sites ranged from –1.8 to –2.9 °C, whereas at the tundra peatland, the permafrost was colder than –6 °C. Although winter air temperatures are similar throughout the study region, deeper snow cover, thicker active layers, and warmer permafrost account for the more gradual seasonal cooling and warmer near-surface temperatures recorded at the subarctic forest sites. The subtle ridge to trough relief, 12–35 cm of permafrost above wedge ice, roots up to 80 years old grown across ice wedges, and negligible tritium levels in wedge ice indicate that thermal contraction cracking in the spruce forests has been infrequent throughout much of the last century. The proximity of wedge ice to the base of the aggrading permafrost table and the absence of old spruce roots spanning ice-wedge troughs suggest that ice-wedge cracking did occur in the forest environments during the cold and dry conditions associated with the Little Ice Age and early part of the 20th century. When these ice wedges cracked, minimum temperatures at the top of permafrost were probably at least 3–8 °C colder than presently observed and similar to present conditions at the tundra peatland.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document