Roles of deep and shallow convection and microphysics in the MJO simulated by the Model for Prediction Across Scales

The November event of the Madden-Julian oscillation (MJO) during the Dynamics of North Atlantic Models (DYNAMO) field campaign was simulated using the global compressible nonhydrostatic Model for Prediction Across Scales with global coarse (60 and 15km) and regional (the Indian Ocean) cloud-permitti...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Other Authors: Pilon, Romain (author), Zhang, Chidong (author), Dudhia, Jimy (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/2015JD024697
Description
Summary:The November event of the Madden-Julian oscillation (MJO) during the Dynamics of North Atlantic Models (DYNAMO) field campaign was simulated using the global compressible nonhydrostatic Model for Prediction Across Scales with global coarse (60 and 15km) and regional (the Indian Ocean) cloud-permitting (3km) meshes. The purpose of this study is to compare roles of parameterized deep and shallow cumulus and microphysics in MJO simulations. Two cumulus schemes were used: Tiedtke and Grell-Freitas. The deep and shallow components of Tiedtke scheme can be turned on and off individually. The results reveal that microphysics alone (without cumulus parameterization) is able to produce strong signals of the MJO in precipitation with 3km mesh and weak MJO signals with 15km mesh. A shallow scheme (Tiedtke) along with microphysics strengthens the MJO signals but makes them less well organized on large scales. A deep cumulus scheme can either improve the large-scale organization of MJO precipitation produced by microphysics and shallow convection (Tiedtke) or impair them (Grell-Freitas). The deep scheme of Tiedtke cannot reproduce the MJO well without its shallow counterpart. The main role of shallow convection in the model is to transport moisture upward to the lower to middle troposphere. By doing so, it removes dry biases in the lower to middle troposphere, a distinct feature in simulations with weak or no MJO signals, and enhances total precipitation and diabatic heating produced by microphysics and deep cumulus schemes. Changing model grid spacing from 60 to 15km makes a little difference in the model fidelity of reproducing the MJO. All roles of shallow convection in 15km simulations with parameterized deep convection cannot be reproduced in 3km simulations without parameterized deep convection. Results from this study suggest that we should pay more attention to the treatment of shallow convection and its connection to other parameterized processes for improving MJO simulations. In other words, a holistic approach ...