EGU22-2666
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-2666
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Simulating the land-atmosphere exchange over mountainous terrain

Manuela Lehner1, Gaspard Simonet1, Mathias W. Rotach1, Friedrich Obleitner1, Lorenzo Giovannini2, and Leonardo Montagnani3
Manuela Lehner et al.
  • 1University of Innsbruck, Department of Atmospheric and Cryospheric Sciences, Innsbruck, Austria (manuela.lehner@uibk.ac.at)
  • 2University of Trento, Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, Trento, Italy
  • 3Free University of Bolzano, Faculty of Science and Technology, Bolzano, Italy

Observations from six eddy-covariance stations in the Austrian Inn Valley reveal a strong spatial variability in near-surface turbulent fluxes. While the stations are located within an approximately 6.5 km long section of the valley and thus within an area similar or even smaller than a single grid cell in current global weather forecasting models, the sites strongly differ in terms of topography and land use. Observed magnitudes of sensible and latent heat fluxes are driven by the solar incoming radiation and thus affected by the local slope angle and orientation, with further influences from the land use on the partitioning of the available energy into sensible and latent heat fluxes. In addition, the locally induced thermal slope- and valley-wind circulation impact the diurnal cycles of the turbulent fluxes. To correctly represent turbulent exchange in mountainous terrain in numerical models, the models thus need to represent all these conditions and processes correctly. We are running WRF simulations with a 1-km grid spacing as part of an ongoing project to evaluate land-surface models and turbulence parameterizations over complex terrain. The simulations are used to determine how sensitive the modeled land-atmosphere exchange is to inaccuracies in the topography and land use, which are unavoidable at this spatial resolution, and whether the model can reproduce the observed spatial variability.

How to cite: Lehner, M., Simonet, G., Rotach, M. W., Obleitner, F., Giovannini, L., and Montagnani, L.: Simulating the land-atmosphere exchange over mountainous terrain, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-2666, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-2666, 2022.