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  • On the growth of layers of ...
    STEVENS, Bjorn

    Journal of the atmospheric sciences, 08/2007, Letnik: 64, Številka: 8
    Journal Article

    A prototype problem of a nonprecipitating convective layer growing into a layer of uniform stratification and exponentially decreasing humidity is introduced to study the mechanism by which the cumulus-topped boundary layer grows. The problem naturally admits the surface buoyancy flux, outer layer stratification, and moisture scale as governing parameters. Large-eddy simulations show that many of the well-known properties of the cumulus-topped boundary layer (including a well-mixed subcloud layer, a cloud-base transition layer, a conditionally unstable cloud layer, and an inversion layer) emerge naturally in the simulations. The simulations also quantify the differences between nonprecipitating moist convection and its dry counterpart. Whereas dry penetrative convective layers grow proportionally to the square root of time (diffusively) the cumulus layers grow proportionally to time (ballistically). The associated downward transport of warm, dry air results in a significant decrease in the surface Bowen ratio. The linear-in-time growth of the cloud layer is shown to result from the transport and subsequent evaporation of liquid water into the inversion layer. This process acts as a sink of buoyancy, which acts to imbue the free troposphere with the properties of the cloud layer. A simple model, based on this mechanism, and formulated in terms of an effective dry buoyancy flux (which is constrained by the subcloud layer’s similarity to a dry convective layer), is shown to provide good predictions of the growth of the layer across a wide range of governing parameters.