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Recent studies have shown two-way interactions between aloft large-scale structures in the atmosphereand local features such as surface temperature, wind, and land use. This requires the use of high-resolution land use schemes and convection-permitting models (CPM) for large eddy simulations (LES). WeatherResearch and Forecasting model (WRF) is being increasingly used with resolutions that allow convectionto be fully simulated, and efforts (such as CORDEX FPS URB RC) have been made to introduce moreprecise land use schemes to model the impacts of urban zones on temperature and wind statistics. Inthis study, we focus on the 2003 summer heat wave and compute temperature and wind statistics fromsurface to upper tropospheric pressure levels, ranging from microscales (~50m) to mesoscales (~500km) inNorth-western France. The emphasis is put on extreme values of temperature by computing its ProbabilityDensity Function (PDF) over the domain and across different spatial scales. Results pertain to second,third, and fourth-order moments of temperature and wind reflecting variance, direction of across-scaleinteractions, and extreme events' occurrence probability, respectively. Finally, we correlate mean large-scaletemperature gradients with those extreme events. This study provides new insights into the complex andcontinuous across scales two-way interactions between local features and large-scale climate.
Danaila et al. (Mon,) studied this question.