Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature Feedback

Abstract A conceptual model based on the surface energy budget is developed to compute the sensitivity of the climatological mean diurnal amplitude and mean daily surface temperature to the soil thermal inertia. It uses the diurnal amplitude of the net surface radiation, the sensitivity of the turbu...

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Main Authors: F. Cheruy, J. L. Dufresne, S. Aït Mesbah, J. Y. Grandpeix, F. Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union (AGU) 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/2017MS001036
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author F. Cheruy
J. L. Dufresne
S. Aït Mesbah
J. Y. Grandpeix
F. Wang
author_facet F. Cheruy
J. L. Dufresne
S. Aït Mesbah
J. Y. Grandpeix
F. Wang
author_sort F. Cheruy
collection DOAJ
description Abstract A conceptual model based on the surface energy budget is developed to compute the sensitivity of the climatological mean diurnal amplitude and mean daily surface temperature to the soil thermal inertia. It uses the diurnal amplitude of the net surface radiation, the sensitivity of the turbulent fluxes to the surface temperature and the soil thermal inertia. Its performance is evaluated globally with numerical simulations using the atmospheric and the land surface modules of a state‐of‐the‐art climate model. The only regions where the thermal inertia has a limited impact are the moist regions. In dry areas, together with the stability of the boundary layer it plays a major role. It also has a significant impact at high and midlatitudes especially in winter when the turbulent fluxes are weak. In semiarid regions, the soil moisture exhibits a high day‐to‐day variability strongly correlated to the evaporation and the day‐to‐day variability of the surface temperature is generally explained by the soil moisture via its control on the evaporation. However, the soil moisture via its control on the thermal inertia reduces the impact of the day‐time evaporative cooling by reducing the nocturnal cooling. This newly identified moisture‐related negative feedback can reduce the variability of the surface temperature in semiarid regions by up to a factor of 2. The model also provides a simple framework to understand the role of the thermal properties in the frequent cold bias identified in stratified stable atmospheric situations in the northern midlatitudes.
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publisher American Geophysical Union (AGU)
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series Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
spelling doaj-art-27e99b8f43484848840c6c426da9a67c2025-08-20T03:07:58ZengAmerican Geophysical Union (AGU)Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems1942-24662017-12-01982906291910.1002/2017MS001036Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature FeedbackF. Cheruy0J. L. Dufresne1S. Aït Mesbah2J. Y. Grandpeix3F. Wang4CNRS/IPSL/LMD, Université Pierre et Marie CurieParis FranceCNRS/IPSL/LMD, Université Pierre et Marie CurieParis FranceCNRS/IPSL/LMD, Université Pierre et Marie CurieParis FranceCNRS/IPSL/LMD, Université Pierre et Marie CurieParis FranceCNRS/IPSL/LMD, Université Pierre et Marie CurieParis FranceAbstract A conceptual model based on the surface energy budget is developed to compute the sensitivity of the climatological mean diurnal amplitude and mean daily surface temperature to the soil thermal inertia. It uses the diurnal amplitude of the net surface radiation, the sensitivity of the turbulent fluxes to the surface temperature and the soil thermal inertia. Its performance is evaluated globally with numerical simulations using the atmospheric and the land surface modules of a state‐of‐the‐art climate model. The only regions where the thermal inertia has a limited impact are the moist regions. In dry areas, together with the stability of the boundary layer it plays a major role. It also has a significant impact at high and midlatitudes especially in winter when the turbulent fluxes are weak. In semiarid regions, the soil moisture exhibits a high day‐to‐day variability strongly correlated to the evaporation and the day‐to‐day variability of the surface temperature is generally explained by the soil moisture via its control on the evaporation. However, the soil moisture via its control on the thermal inertia reduces the impact of the day‐time evaporative cooling by reducing the nocturnal cooling. This newly identified moisture‐related negative feedback can reduce the variability of the surface temperature in semiarid regions by up to a factor of 2. The model also provides a simple framework to understand the role of the thermal properties in the frequent cold bias identified in stratified stable atmospheric situations in the northern midlatitudes.https://doi.org/10.1002/2017MS001036soil‐moisturesurface temperaturethermal inertialand‐atmosphere interactionenergy budgetboundary layer
spellingShingle F. Cheruy
J. L. Dufresne
S. Aït Mesbah
J. Y. Grandpeix
F. Wang
Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature Feedback
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
soil‐moisture
surface temperature
thermal inertia
land‐atmosphere interaction
energy budget
boundary layer
title Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature Feedback
title_full Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature Feedback
title_fullStr Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature Feedback
title_full_unstemmed Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature Feedback
title_short Role of Soil Thermal Inertia in Surface Temperature and Soil Moisture‐Temperature Feedback
title_sort role of soil thermal inertia in surface temperature and soil moisture temperature feedback
topic soil‐moisture
surface temperature
thermal inertia
land‐atmosphere interaction
energy budget
boundary layer
url https://doi.org/10.1002/2017MS001036
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AT saitmesbah roleofsoilthermalinertiainsurfacetemperatureandsoilmoisturetemperaturefeedback
AT jygrandpeix roleofsoilthermalinertiainsurfacetemperatureandsoilmoisturetemperaturefeedback
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