Linda Schlemmer
ETH Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Linda Schlemmer.
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2014
Linda Schlemmer; Cathy Hohenegger
AbstractThis study investigates how precipitation-driven cold pools aid the formation of wider clouds that are essential for a transition from shallow to deep convection. In connection with a temperature depression and a depletion of moisture inside developing cold pools, an accumulation of moisture in moist patches around the cold pools is observed. Convective clouds are formed on top of these moist patches. Larger moist patches form with time supporting more and larger clouds. Moreover, enhanced vertical lifting along the leading edges of the gravity current triggered by the cold pool is found. The interplay of moisture aggregation and lifting eventually promotes the formation of wider clouds that are less affected by entrainment and become deeper. These mechanisms are corroborated in a series of cloud-resolving model simulations representing different atmospheric environments. A positive feedback is observed in that, in an atmosphere in which cloud and rain formation is facilitated, stronger downdrafts...
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2014
Paul Arnaud Froidevaux; Linda Schlemmer; Juerg Schmidli; Wolfgang Langhans; Christoph Schär
AbstractThe importance of soil moisture anomalies on airmass convection over semiarid regions has been recognized in several studies. The underlying mechanisms remain partly unclear. An open question is why wetter soils can result in either an increase or a decrease of precipitation (positive or negative soil moisture–precipitation feedback, respectively). Here an idealized cloud-resolving modeling framework is used to explore the local soil moisture–precipitation feedback. The approach is able to replicate both positive and negative feedback loops, depending on the environmental parameters.The mechanism relies on horizontal soil moisture variations, which may develop and intensify spontaneously. The positive expression of the feedback is associated with the initiation of convection over dry soil patches, but the convective cells then propagate over wet patches where they strengthen and preferentially precipitate. The negative feedback may occur when the wind profile is too weak to support the propagation...
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2011
Linda Schlemmer; Cathy Hohenegger; Jürg Schmidli; Christopher S. Bretherton; Christoph Schär
AbstractThis paper introduces an idealized cloud-resolving modeling (CRM) framework for the study of midlatitude diurnal convection over land. The framework is used to study the feedbacks among soil, boundary layer, and diurnal convection. It includes a setup with explicit convection and a full set of parameterizations. Predicted variables are constantly relaxed toward prescribed atmospheric profiles and soil conditions. The relaxation is weak in the lower troposphere and upper soil to allow the development of a realistic diurnal planetary boundary layer. The model is run to its own equilibrium (30 days).The framework is able to produce a realistic timing of the diurnal cycle of convection. It also confirms the development of deeper convection in a more unstably stratified atmosphere.With this relaxation method, the simulated “diurnal equilibrium convection” determines the humidity profile of the lower atmosphere, and the simulation becomes insensitive to the reference humidity profile. However, if a fast...
Monthly Weather Review | 2010
Linda Schlemmer; Olivia Martius; Michael Sprenger; Cornelia Schwierz; Arwen Twitchett
Extreme precipitation events along the Alpine south side (AS) are often forced by upper-level positive potential vorticity (PV) anomalies over western Europe. These so-called PV streamers go along with a dynamical forcing for upward motion, a reduction of the static stability in the troposphere (hence facilitating convection), and are associated with low-level winds that transport moisture toward the Alps. A case of heavy precipitation is examined using the 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis data. Piecewise PV inversion (PPVI) and the limited-area Climate High Resolution Model (CHRM) are used to assess the influences of mesoscale parts of the streamer on the precipitation event. The impacts on the vertical stability are quantified by the convective available potential energy (CAPE) and an index of static stability. Very sensitive areas in terms of the stability are located beneath the southern tip of the streamer; smaller changes in the stability are observed in the Alpine region. The moisture transport toward the Alps is sensitive to the amplitude of the streamer, which influences the amount of water that can be transported along its eastern flank. The impacts of the topography on the flow are assessed by calculating an average inverse Froude number. Whether or not the air parcels are blocked by or lifted over the barrier (going along with suppressed and enhanced precipitation, respectively) depends on the vertical stability and the impinging wind velocity, two parameters that are inherently linked to the PV streamer and its substructure.
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2016
Davide Panosetti; Steven Böing; Linda Schlemmer; Jürg Schmidli
AbstractOn summertime fair-weather days, thermally driven wind systems play an important role in determining the initiation of convection and the occurrence of localized precipitation episodes over mountainous terrain. This study compares the mechanisms of convection initiation and precipitation development within a thermally driven flow over an idealized double-ridge system in large-eddy (LESs) and convection-resolving (CRM) simulations. First, LES at a horizontal grid spacing of 200 m is employed to analyze the developing circulations and associated clouds and precipitation. Second, CRM simulations at horizontal grid length of 1 km are conducted to evaluate the performance of a kilometer-scale model in reproducing the discussed mechanisms.Mass convergence and a weaker inhibition over the two ridges flanking the valley combine with water vapor advection by upslope winds to initiate deep convection. In the CRM simulations, the spatial distribution of clouds and precipitation is generally well captured. Ho...
Geophysical Research Letters | 2017
Adel Imamovic; Linda Schlemmer; Christoph Schär
Ensembles of convection-resolving simulations with a simplified land surface are conducted to dissect the isolated and combined impacts of soil-moisture and orography on deep-convective precipitation under weak synoptic forcing. In particular, the deep-convective precipitation response to a uniform and a non-uniform soil-moisture perturbation is investigated both in settings with and without orography. In the case of horizontally uniform perturbations, we find a consistently positive soil moisture-precipitation feedback, irrespective of the presence of low orography. On the other hand, a negative feedback emerges with localized perturbations: a dry soil heterogeneity substantially enhances rain amounts that scale linearly with the dryness of the soil, while a moist heterogeneity suppresses rain amounts. If the heterogeneity is located in a mountainous region, the relative importance of soil-moisture heterogeneity decreases with increasing mountain height: A mountain 500m in height is sufficient to neutralize the local soil moisture-precipitation feedback.
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2012
Linda Schlemmer; Cathy Hohenegger; Juerg Schmidli; Christoph Schär
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2016
Linda Schlemmer; Cathy Hohenegger
Tellus A | 2015
Cathy Hohenegger; Linda Schlemmer; Levi G. Silvers
Meteorologische Zeitschrift | 2016
Hanieh Hassanzadeh; Jürg Schmidli; Wolfgang Langhans; Linda Schlemmer; Christoph Schär