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Published bySheena Hamilton Modified over 9 years ago
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Seasonal Modeling (NOAA) Jian-Wen Bao Sara Michelson Jim Wilczak Curtis Fleming Emily Piencziak
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Accomplishments Preparation of gridded data sets for the entire summer of 2000 to initialize MM5 Refinement of the FDAA data preparation: 1.Elevation of each sigma level varies with observation sites. 2.Observations are interpolated from two adjacent data levels to a given model level. 3.An anisotropic spatial influence function is being implemented and tested. Observational data preparation for model evaluation: 1.Hand editted (level 1C) winds and RASS from 25 wind profilers for 60 days (3 August – 2 October, 2000) 2.Data from 1 June – 2 August remain to be editted 3.PBL depths for entire period, all profilers, have been calculated
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PBL Depth Estimation
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36km grid 95x91 12km grid 91x91 4km grid 190x190 All have 50 layers, with 22 in lowest 1km Subregions for Model Evaluation Wind profiler sites
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A Major Issue to Settle What is the best model configuration for the seasonal simulations? Through: Evaluation of chemical model simulations Evaluation of major transport processes Comparison of the simulations using V6 and V7 Comparison of WRF and MM5
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Chemical Model Evaluation MM5 runs of two 5 day periods ( Jul 24- Jul 29 and Aug 3- Aug 8 2000) were completed. Analysis and comparison of the above two runs with observations have been started.
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Comparison of the Simulated and Observed Surface Winds for the Jul-Aug Case
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ABL Height Comparisons (Colored contours are TKE, and dots indicate the observed ABL height)
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Observed clouds vs Model Simulation
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Solar Radiation Fluxes from Various Versions of Models for the Jul-Aug Case
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Physics Configuration in MM5: the MYJ ABL and surface layer schemes the NOAH land surface model (LSM) the Dudhia short-wave, RRTM long-wave radiation schemes the Reisner microphysics parameterization the Grell convective scheme (only on the 36 and 12 km grids) Physics Configuration in WRF: the MYJ ABL and surface layer schemes the NOAH land surface model (LSM) the Dudhia short-wave, RRTM long-wave radiation schemes the Lin et al. microphysics parameterization the Kain-Fritsch convective scheme (only on the 36 km and 12 km grids) NCEP’s ETA 40-km isobaric analysis is used to initialize both WRF and MM5 at 1200 UTC 29 July 2000. Domain and Physics Configurations of MM5 and WRF
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MM5 WRF 36 km Topography 4 km Topography 4 km Topography 36 km Topography 4 km Veg-Frac 4 km Veg-Frac 4 km Landuse 4 km Landuse MM5 WRF Differences of MM5 and WRF
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Temperature at Soil Layer 1
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Temperature at Soil Layer 2
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Temperature at Soil Layer 3
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Temperature at Soil Layer 4
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Moisture at Soil Layer 1
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Moisture at Soil Layer 2
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Moisture at Soil Layer 3
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Differences in the LSM Initialization MM5WRF Moisture at Soil Layer 4
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Comparison of the simulated and observed areal averaged 2m temperatures and 10m winds
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Comparison of the simulated and observed areal averaged 2m temperatures and 10m winds
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Comparison of the simulated and observed areal averaged 2m temperatures and 10m winds
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Comparison of the simulated and observed areal averaged 2m temperatures and 10m winds
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WRFMM5WRF-mm5ics from 1200 UTC 29 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 1200 UTC 29 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 1200 UTC 29 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 0000 UTC 30 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 0000 UTC 30 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 0000 UTC 30 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 1200 UTC 30 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 1200 UTC 30 July to 1200 UTC 2 August from 1200 UTC 30 July to 1200 UTC 2 August comparison of simulated forward trajectories
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Conclusions Averaging meteorological input in time Optimizing “tunable” parameters through sensitivity experiments Improving cloud physics and cloud-radiation interaction Using MM5V3-6 for the seasonal modeling Undesirable noise in the FDDA run Uncertainties in the LSM Some differences in the simulated and observed clouds on cloudy days Recommendations
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ETL CCOS Web Site www.etl.noaa.gov/programs/ modeling/CCOS/data www.etl.noaa.gov/programs/
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