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Atmospheric physics
The physical processes associated with radiative transfer, convection, clouds, turbulent mixing, sub grid-scale orographic drag and non-orographic gravity wave drag all have a strong impact on the large-scale flow of the atmosphere. However, these mechanisms are often active at scales smaller than the resolved scales of the model grid. In IFS the effect of sub-scale physical processes on weather systems is expressed in terms of resolved model variables using parameterisation. This involves both statistical methods and simplified mathematical-physical models, (e.g. the air closest to the earth’s surface exchanges heat with the surface through turbulent diffusion or convection, which in turn adjusts stability in the lowest layers).
Moist physics
The moist physics package aims to improve the representation of complicated interactions between turbulence in the lowest part of the atmosphere, convective motions, and the cloud physics. It is important that these processes interact with each other in a physically consistent way to represent real-world processes effectively.
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Aspects of the moist physics package are given below:
Fig2A.1.5-1: Outline of the moist physics in IFS. Schematic of the representation of the cloudy convective boundary layer in IFS, consisting of moist convective mass flux in the moist convection scheme and dry mass flux and turbulent diffusion in the turbulence scheme. Turbulent diffusion is confined within the dry boundary layer. However, it is extended to the cloud top of Sc where there is also an additional contribution from radiative cooling and cloud top entrainment.
The convective boundary layer
The turbulent and convective mixing in the convective boundary layer is formulated in a simple and consistent way. There are several important aspects:
- the mixed layer top is typically:
- near the inversion top in the clear boundary layer.
- near the cloud base for Cu-topped boundary layers.
- near the cloud top for Sc‑topped boundary layers.
- the computed strength of the temperature inversion is used to distinguish between Sc and Cu topped boundary layers.
- entrainment at the top of the mixed layer is proportional to the surface buoyancy flux (20%) for all types of boundary layers. Additionally for Sc, there is an increased contribution to turbulent mixing from entrainment driven by radiation effects at the cloud surface.
- all cloud processes are handled by the cloud scheme.
Saturation adjustment and the cloud scheme
The moist physics package has brought:
- a reduction in the number of overactive quasi-stationary precipitation cells.
- a simpler and more consistent representation of cloud fraction tendencies across the model.
- some beneficial increases in the cloud cover in deep cloud systems and in humidity in the mid-to-upper troposphere.
Microphysical processes and interaction with radiation
The moist physics package has improved the parameterisation of microphysical processes by:
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Even small changes in the processes can have significant impacts on the cloud and precipitation field and can affect shortwave and longwave radiation.
Deep convection and mesoscale convective systems
The moist physics upgrade has improved the parameterisation of deep convection, especially addressing:
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These include the coupling between the convection and the dynamics, which is particularly delicate in the case of mesoscale convective systems that propagate and regenerate by producing their own horizontal convergence.
Additional sources of information
(Note: In older material there may be references to issues that have subsequently been addressed)
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