Error characterization of CO2 vertical mixing in the atmospheric transport model WRF-VPRM

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Abstract

One of the dominant uncertainties in inverse estimates of regional CO 2 surface-atmosphere fluxes is related to model errors in vertical transport within the planetary boundary layer (PBL). In this study we present the results from a synthetic experiment using the atmospheric model WRF-VPRM to realistically simulate transport of CO 2 for large parts of the European continent at 10 km spatial resolution. To elucidate the impact of vertical mixing error on modeled CO 2 mixing ratios we simulated a month during the growing season (August 2006) with different commonly used parameterizations of the PBL (Mellor-Yamada-Janjić (MYJ) and Yonsei-University (YSU) scheme). To isolate the effect of transport errors we prescribed the same CO 2 surface fluxes for both simulations. Differences in simulated CO 2 mixing ratios (model bias) were on the order of 3 ppm during daytime with larger values at night. We present a simple method to reduce this bias by 70-80% when the true height of the mixed layer is known. © 2012 Author(s).

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Kretschmer, R., Gerbig, C., Karstens, U., & Koch, F. T. (2012). Error characterization of CO2 vertical mixing in the atmospheric transport model WRF-VPRM. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(5), 2441–2458. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-12-2441-2012

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