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QPF ISSUES IN NWP. William A. Gallus, Jr. Dept. of Geological & Atmospheric Science Iowa State University. ETA. MM5. OBS PREC:3/12-4/12. OBS PREC:4/12-5/12. 24HR PRECIPITATION 4/00-5/00. MM5. ETA. OBS:5/12-6/12. OBS:3/12-4/12. OBS:4/12-5/12. 48 HR PRECIPITATION (4/00-6/00).
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QPF ISSUES IN NWP William A. Gallus, Jr. Dept. of Geological & Atmospheric Science Iowa State University
ETA MM5 OBS PREC:3/12-4/12 OBS PREC:4/12-5/12 24HR PRECIPITATION 4/00-5/00
MM5 ETA OBS:5/12-6/12 OBS:3/12-4/12 OBS:4/12-5/12 48 HR PRECIPITATION (4/00-6/00)
GOOD NEWS: QPF is improving!! Increased computer resources have allowed better parameterization schemes and model resolution 2-day precipitation forecast today is now as accurate as 1-day forecast in 1974 Each resolution improvement in NCEP Eta model improves skill scores
MRF has some skill compared to persistence, even out to 7-8 days: Roads et al. 1991 (WAF)
BAD NEWS: Problems abound Most improvement in QPF scores occurs during cold season - little improvement in warm season Flash flooding kills more people than any other convective-related event QPF problems have several potential sources Skill scores themselves may be misleading or of little “real” value
Roads and Maisel 1991 WAF: MRF has regional biases in precipitation over long periods
Example of human improvements on numerical QPF (Olson et al. 1995, WAF) Manual NGM OBS
Slow improvement in skill for human forecasters, but less skill for heavier amounts (Olson et al. 1995, WAF)
Annual bias has also improved slowly, but interestingly, is better for Day 2 than Day 1 (Olson et al. 1995, WAF)
QPF skill is better is winter than in summer, even when forecasters adjust the NWP guidance
What are sources of QPF error? • Resolution inadequacies • Parameterization errors • Initialization deficiencies • Observational errors in verification
If vertical motion is directly constrained by horizontal resolution….. Shouldn’t forecasts for heavy rain events be greatly improved with finer resolution? Is there a “magic” resolution where model QPF will approach observed peak values
Gallus 1999 found QPF-horizontal resolution dependence is case-dependent and varies with convective parameterization 6/16/96 6/14/98 7/28/97 Mx obs: 225 Mx obs: 330 Mx obs: 250 5/27/97 7/17/96 Mx obs: 102 Mx obs: 300 BMJ -shaded KF - clear
Extreme example of unexpected results and Conv. Param. Impacts: 7/17/96 00UTC surface conditions
00 UTC 17 JUL 1996 - OMAHA Betts-Miller-JanjicReference T, Td profiles shown
Large MCS drops up to 300 mm of rain, causing record river crests and severe flash flooding in far eastern NE and western IA.
7/17/96 BMJ simulations with 78,39,22 and 12 km horizontal resolution NOTE: actual reduction in peak QPF amounts as resolution improves MX: 46 MX: 45 MX: 32 MX: 32
7/17/96 KF simulations: NOTE: very strong QPF sensitivity to horizontal resolution. Precipitation area shifted much farther north than in BMJ runs, or observations MX: 70 MX: 11 MX: 135 MX: 186
Daytime precipitation (12-00 UTC 7/16-17/96) BMJ produces much larger area and amounts
KF BMJ Convective scheme influences cold pool strength, which in turn, affects evolution of events outside initial rain region
Impacts of convective schemes may be felt outside region of precipitation. Here, stronger downdrafts in KF scheme result in greater northward transport of instability into Minnesota - leading to more intense subsequent development. KF BMJ
Another case: Iowa flood of June 1996 Large-scale region looked favorable for excessive rains Heaviest rains (225 mm) fell in small area in warm sector Impacts of horizontal resolution changes strongly depend on convective scheme used
Tropical-like soundings with very deep moisture Td at 850 mb = 18 C Td at 700 mb = 8 C
BMJ simulations: Almost no horizontal resolution-QPF dependence No hint of C IA maximum
12 UTC 6/16 Eta model 00 hr - initialization NOTE: cold pool is missing: winds are southerly, without E component
21 UTC 6/16 Observed Surface Moisture Convergence Flood-producing storms would form on C IA enhancement
Simulated Moisture Convergence -21 UTC - BMJ run with 12 km resolution Despite poor initial wind field, model does show enhancement in W IA
BMJ simulation: No general clearing into Iowa by 1 pm - Less destabilization than actually occurred
KF simulations: Strong horizontal resolution-QPF dependence Some evidence of C IA enhancement with 22 and 12 km resolution
KF 6 hr forecast: Some clearing into SW Iowa more agreement with obs.
June case shows: • Moist low-mid troposphere allows BMJ scheme to be aggressive • Even high resolution may not improve simulation of small QPF maxima if other simulated parameters are incorrect • Generation of QPF upstream due to resolution changes may affect QPF downstream
Changes within a specific convective parameterization can also have a very pronounced effect on QPF Spencer and Stensrud (1998) show this using MM4 with KF scheme
Spencer & Stensrud variations in KF scheme Permit Precipitation Efficiency to remain at maximum (90%) instead of varying from 10-90% Neglect convective downdrafts Delay convective downdrafts
Max. Prec for 4 tests Maximum QPF in 4 KF MM4 runs From Spencer and Stensrud 1998 - MWR
Microphysicalschemes may be the next challenge - once resolution improves so that convective parameterization is no longer necessary • Colle and Mass examine resolution-orographic precipitation (1999) dependence • Microphysical schemes influence results
OBS PRECIP IN PACIFIC NORTHWEST FLOOD EVENT (1996) from Colle and Mass (1999; MWR) Pronounced orographic effects
4 km MM5 run does well at crest but underestimates lee precipitation
Horizontal resolution affects precipitation patterns near mountain due to resolution of mountain wave effects. Model QPF performance in lee of mountain fluctuates - low bias is best in coarsest run, but heaviest precipitation just to lee of crest occurs with highest resolution 1.33 4 12 36
Although precipitation forecasts generally improved as resolution was refined from 36 to 4km, little additional improvement occurred with 1.3 km resolution (Colle & Mass)
Microphysical schemes may have significant influences at high resolution. Colle and Mass (1999; MWR) found that lee-side precipitation was too small in high-res MM5 simulations, partly because snow fallspeeds were too large.
Best results may not occur with most sophisticated microphysical scheme
Microphysical scheme differences affect QPF in different areas
Mesoscale initialization may be poor and affect QPF Stensrud and Fritsch (1994) have shown the impacts of improved cold pool initialization
Typical initialization deficiencies • Low-level jet characteristics • Cloud boundaries • Fronts and drylines • Convective outflows • Surface characteristics
Stensrud and Fritsch 1994 MWR: Initialization of NE KS mesoscale boundary has important impact on QPF MM4 -25KM