|
Read Full Article Cited by
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 106, NO. D6,
PAGES 5385–5401,
2001
GATOR-GCMM: A global- through urban-scale air pollution and weather forecast model 1. Model design and treatment of subgrid
soil, vegetation, roads, rooftops, water, sea ice, and snow
Mark Z. Jacobson
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California
Abstract
A model that treats nesting of gas, size- and composition-resolved aerosol, radiative, and meteorological parameters from
the global through urban scales (<5-km grid spacing) was developed. The model treats multiple one-way-nested layers and multiple
air quality and meteorological domains in each layer between the global and the urban scales. This latter feature allows forecast
of air pollution and weather at several urban or regional sites during the same simulation. Regardless of the number of domains
used during a single continuous simulation, the central memory required never exceeds 1.5 times and 2.1 times that of the
largest domain for gas and gas/aerosol simulations, respectively. A submodule was developed for all domains to treat ground
temperatures, latent heat fluxes, and sensible heat fluxes over subgrid soil types (with and without vegetation), water, sea
ice, and urban areas. Urban areas are divided into road surfaces, rooftops, vegetation, and bare soil. Snow is treated over
all surface types. The global-through-urban model is applied in a companion paper to study elevated ozone, ozone in national
parks, and weather during a field campaign in northern and central California.
Received 27
January
2000;
accepted 29
August
2000.
Read Full Article Cited by
Citation: Jacobson, M. Z.
(2001),
GATOR-GCMM: A global- through urban-scale air pollution and weather forecast model 1. Model design and treatment of subgrid
soil, vegetation, roads, rooftops, water, sea ice, and snow,
J. Geophys. Res.,
106(D6),
5385–5401.
Copyright 2001 by the American Geophysical Union.
|