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  • Author or Editor: D. K. LILLY x
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D. K. Lilly

The energy and momentum removed from the troposphere and lower atmosphere by the breaking of large amplitude mountain lee waves may be a significant factor in the evolution and maintenance of the large-scale atmospheric circulation. A program is outlined for improving knowledge and understanding of this phenomenon and for incorporating its effects into numerical simulation and forecasting models.

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Reinder A. Feddes
,
Holger Hoff
,
Michael Bruen
,
Todd Dawson
,
Patricia de Rosnay
,
Paul Dirmeyer
,
Robert B. Jackson
,
Pavel Kabat
,
Axel Kleidon
,
Allan Lilly
, and
Andrew J. Pitman

From 30 September to 2 October 1999 a workshop was held in Gif-sur-Yvette, France, with the central objective to develop a research strategy for the next 3–5 years, aiming at a systematic description of root functioning, rooting depth, and root distribution for modeling root water uptake from local and regional to global scales. The goal was to link more closely the weather prediction and climate and hydrological models with ecological and plant physiological information in order to improve the understanding of the impact that root functioning has on the hydrological cycle at various scales. The major outcome of the workshop was a number of recommendations, detailed at the end of this paper, on root water uptake parameterization and modeling and on collection of root and soil hydraulic data.

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Bjorn Stevens
,
Donald H. Lenschow
,
Gabor Vali
,
Hermann Gerber
,
A. Bandy
,
B. Blomquist
,
J. -L. Brenguier
,
C. S. Bretherton
,
F. Burnet
,
T. Campos
,
S. Chai
,
I. Faloona
,
D. Friesen
,
S. Haimov
,
K. Laursen
,
D. K. Lilly
,
S. M. Loehrer
,
Szymon P. Malinowski
,
B. Morley
,
M. D. Petters
,
D. C. Rogers
,
L. Russell
,
V. Savic-Jovcic
,
J. R. Snider
,
D. Straub
,
Marcin J. Szumowski
,
H. Takagi
,
D. C. Thornton
,
M. Tschudi
,
C. Twohy
,
M. Wetzel
, and
M. C. van Zanten

The second Dynamics and Chemistry of Marine Stratocumulus (DYCOMS-II) field study is described. The field program consisted of nine flights in marine stratocumulus west-southwest of San Diego, California. The objective of the program was to better understand the physics a n d dynamics of marine stratocumulus. Toward this end special flight strategies, including predominantly nocturnal flights, were employed to optimize estimates of entrainment velocities at cloud-top, large-scale divergence within the boundary layer, drizzle processes in the cloud, cloud microstructure, and aerosol–cloud interactions. Cloud conditions during DYCOMS-II were excellent with almost every flight having uniformly overcast clouds topping a well-mixed boundary layer. Although the emphasis of the manuscript is on the goals and methodologies of DYCOMS-II, some preliminary findings are also presented—the most significant being that the cloud layers appear to entrain less and drizzle more than previous theoretical work led investigators to expect.

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