2-way coupling the hydrological land surface model PROMET with the regional climate model MM5

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Abstract

Most land surface hydrological models (LSHMs) consider land surface processes (e.g. soil-plant-atmosphere interactions, lateral water flows, snow and ice) in a spatially detailed manner. The atmosphere is considered as exogenous driver, neglecting feedbacks between the land surface and the atmosphere. On the other hand, regional climate models (RCMs) generally simulate land surface processes through coarse descriptions and spatial scales but include land-atmosphere interactions. What is the impact of the differently applied model physics and spatial resolution of LSHMs on the performance of RCMs? What feedback effects are induced by different land surface models? This study analyses the impact of replacing the land surface module (LSM) within an RCM with a high resolution LSHM. A 2-way coupling approach was applied using the LSHM PROMET (1 × 1 km2) and the atmospheric part of the RCM MM5 (45 × 45 km2). The scaling interface SCALMET is used for down-and upscaling the linear and non-linear fluxes between the model scales. The change in the atmospheric response by MM5 using the LSHM is analysed, and its quality is compared to observations of temperature and precipitation for a 4 yr period from 1996 to 1999 for the Upper Danube catchment. By substituting the Noah-LSM with PROMET, simulated non-bias-corrected near-surface air temperature improves for annual, monthly and daily courses when compared to measurements from 277 meteorological weather stations within the Upper Danube catchment. The mean annual bias was improved from-0.85 to-0.13 K. In particular, the improved afternoon heating from May to September is caused by increased sensible heat flux and decreased latent heat flux as well as more incoming solar radiation in the fully coupled PROMET/MM5 in comparison to the NOAH/MM5 simulation. Triggered by the LSM replacement, precipitation overall is reduced; however simulated precipitation amounts are still of high uncertainty, both spatially and temporally. The distribution of precipitation follows the coarse topography representation in MM5, resulting in a spatial shift of maximum precipitation northwards of the Alps. Consequently, simulation of river runoff inherits precipitation biases from MM5. However, by comparing the water balance, the bias of annual average runoff was improved from 21.2% (NOAH/MM5) to 4.4% (PROMET/MM5) when compared to measurements at the outlet gauge of the Upper Danube watershed in Achleiten. © 2013 Author(s).

Figures

  • Fig. 1. Schematic illustration of applying the original Noah-LSM (left panel) as the land surface representation within MM5, applying a 1-way coupling with the PROMET LSHM (second panel from lef ), and applying a 2-way coupling of the PROMET LSHM with the MM5 atmosphere (right panel).
  • Fig. 2. Spatially averaged monthly land surface mass and energy fluxes (long-wave outgoing radiation, short-wave reflection, evapotranspiration, sensible heat flux) for the Upper Danube catchment simulated with Noah-LSM and with PROMET for the years 1996–1999.
  • Fig. 3. Monthly course of the planetary boundary layer height (1996–1999) of 2-way coupled PROMET/MM5 and NOAH/MM5 simulations.
  • Fig. 4. Monthly course of the total incoming short-wave radiation (1996–1999) of 2-way coupled PROMET/MM5 and NOAH/MM5 simulations.
  • Fig. 6. Monthly mean temperature of 2-way coupled PROMET/MM5 and NOAH/MM5 simulations in comparison with measurements in the Upper Danube catchment.
  • Fig. 5. Difference plot b twe n 2-way coupl d PROMET/MM5 and NOAH/MM5 annual mean near-surface air temperature in the Upper Danube catchment, downscaled to 1 km by using SCALMET.
  • Fig. 7. Monthly mean diurnal cycle (1996–1999) of the near-surface air temperature (3-hourly) for the Upper Danube catchment.
  • Fig. 8. Monthly convective and total precipitation of MM5 simulations coupled with Noah-LSM and PROMET compared to measurements.

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APA

Zabel, F., & Mauser, W. (2013). 2-way coupling the hydrological land surface model PROMET with the regional climate model MM5. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 17(5), 1705–1714. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-17-1705-2013

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