A new fast clear-sky model called McClear was developed to estimate the downwelling shortwave direct and global irradiances received at ground level under clear skies. It is a fully physical model replacing empirical relations or simpler models used before. It exploits the recent results on aerosol properties, and total column content in water vapour and ozone produced by the MACC project (Monitoring Atmosphere Composition and Climate). It accurately reproduces the irradiance computed by the libRadtran reference radiative transfer model with a computational speed approximately 105 times greater by adopting the abaci, or look-up table, approach combined with interpolation functions. It is therefore suited for geostationary satellite retrievals or numerical weather prediction schemes with many pixels or grid points, respectively. McClear irradiances were compared to 1 min measurements made in clear-sky conditions at several stations within the Baseline Surface Radiation Network in various climates. The bias for global irradiance comprises between −6 and 25 W m−2. The RMSE ranges from 20 W m−2 (3% of the mean observed irradiance) to 36 W m−2 (5%) and the correlation coefficient ranges between 0.95 and 0.99. The bias for the direct irradiance comprises between −48 and +33 W m−2. The root mean square error (RMSE) ranges from 33 W m−2 (5%) to 64 W m−2 (10%). The correlation coefficient ranges between 0.84 and 0.98. This work demonstrates the quality of the McClear model combined with MACC products, and indirectly the quality of the aerosol properties modelled by the MACC reanalysis
Abstract. Stratospheric water vapour (SWV) is a climatically important
atmospheric constituent due to its impacts on the radiation budget and
atmospheric chemical composition. Despite the important role of SWV in the
climate system, the processes controlling the distribution and variation in
water vapour in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS) are not
well understood. In order to better understand the mechanism of transport of
water vapour through the tropopause, this study uses the high-resolution
Global Environmental Multiscale model of the Environment and Climate Change
Canada to simulate a lower stratosphere moistening event over North
America. Satellite remote sensing and aircraft in situ observations are used to
evaluate the quality of model simulation. The main focus of this study is to
evaluate the processes that influence the lower stratosphere water vapour
budget, particularly the direct water vapour transport and the moistening due
to the ice sublimation. In the high-resolution simulations with horizontal
grid spacing of less than 2.5 km, it is found that the main contribution to
lower stratospheric moistening is the upward transport caused by the
breaking of gravity waves. In contrast, for the lower-resolution simulation
with horizontal grid spacing of 10 km, the lower stratospheric moistening is
dominated by the sublimation of ice. In comparison with the aircraft in situ
observations, the high-resolution simulations predict the water vapour
content in the UTLS well, while the lower-resolution simulation overestimates
the water vapour content. This overestimation is associated with the overly
abundant ice in the UTLS along with a sublimation rate that is too high in the lower
stratosphere. The results of this study affirm the strong influence of
overshooting convection on the lower stratospheric water vapour and highlight
the importance of both dynamics and microphysics in simulating the water
vapour distribution in the UTLS region.
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