A PHYSICALLY-BASED SCHEME FOR THE URBAN ENERGY
BUDGET IN ATMOSPHERIC MODELS
VALÉRY MASSON
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Centre National de Recherches Météorologiques, Toulouse, France
(Received in final form 29 September 1999)
Abstract. An urban surface scheme for atmospheric mesoscale models is presented. A generaliz-
ation of local canyon geometry is defined instead of the usual bare soil formulation currently used
to represent cities in atmospheric models. This allows refinement of the radiative budgets as well as
momentum, turbulent heat and ground fluxes. The scheme is aimed to be as general as possible, in
order to represent any city in the world, for any time or weather condition (heat island cooling by
night, urban wake, water evaporation after rainfall and snow effects).
Two main parts of the scheme are validated against published data. Firstly, it is shown that the
evolution of the model-predicted fluxes during a night with calm winds is satisfactory, considering
both the longwave budget and the surface temperatures. Secondly, the original shortwave scheme is
tested off-line and compared to the effective albedo of a canyon scale model. These two validations
show that the radiative energy input to the urban surface model is realistic.
Sensitivity tests of the model are performed for one-year simulation periods, for both oceanic
and continental climates. The scheme has the ability to retrieve, without ad hoc assumptions, the
diurnal hysteresis between the turbulent heat flux and ground heat flux. It reproduces the damping
of the daytime turbulent heat flux by the heat storage flux observed in city centres. The latent heat
flux is negligible on average, but can be large when short time scales are considered (especially
after rainfall). It also suggests that in densely built areas, domestic heating can overwhelm the net
radiation, and supply a continuous turbulent heat flux towards the atmosphere. This becomes very
important in winter for continental climates. Finally, a comparison with a vegetation scheme shows
that the suburban environment can be represented with a bare soil formulation for large temporal or
spatial averages (typical of global climatic studies), but that a surface scheme dedicated to the urban
surface is necessary when smaller scales are considered: town meteorological forecasts, mesoscale
or local studies.
Keywords: Surface scheme, Urban Canyon, Urban energy balance, Urban water balance, Urban
boundary layer.
1. Introduction
Due to the complexity and diversity of towns around the world, conclusions drawn
from experimental studies on the interaction between the atmosphere and urb-
anized areas most of the time are limited either to a particular site or physical
processes. To overcome this problem, numerical studies are aimed to simulate the
urban climatology or energy budget. However, they still follow rather simplified
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E-mail: valery.masson@meteo.fr
Boundary-Layer Meteorology 94: 357–397, 2000.
© 2000 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.