Forecasting Atmospheric Rivers during CalWater 2015

Author:

Cordeira Jason M.1,Ralph F. Martin2,Martin Andrew2,Gaggini Natalie3,Spackman J. Ryan3,Neiman Paul J.4,Rutz Jonathan J.5,Pierce Roger6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric Science and Chemistry, Plymouth State University, Plymouth, New Hampshire

2. Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California

3. Science and Technology Corporation, Boulder, Colorado

4. Physical Sciences Division, NOAA/Earth System Research Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

5. NOAA/NWS/Western Region Headquarters, Salt Lake City, Utah

6. NOAA/NWS/San Diego Weather Forecast Office, San Diego, California

Abstract

Abstract Atmospheric rivers (ARs) are long and narrow corridors of enhanced vertically integrated water vapor (IWV) and IWV transport (IVT) within the warm sector of extra tropical cyclones that can produce heavy precipitation and flooding in regions of complex terrain, especially along the U.S. West Coast. Several field campaigns have investigated ARs under the CalWater program of field studies. The first field phase of CalWater during 2009–11 increased the number of observations of precipitation and aerosols, among other parameters, across California and sampled ARs in the coastal and near-coastal environment, whereas the second field phase of CalWater during 2014–15 observed the structure and intensity of ARs and aerosols in the coastal and offshore environment over the northeast Pacific. This manuscript highlights the forecasts that were prepared for the CalWater field campaign in 2015, and the development and use of an “AR portal” that was used to inform these forecasts. The AR portal contains archived and real-time deterministic and probabilistic gridded forecast tools related to ARs that emphasize water vapor concentrations and water vapor flux distributions over the eastern North Pacific, among other parameters, in a variety of formats derived from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) Global Forecast System and Global Ensemble Forecast System. The tools created for the CalWater 2015 field campaign provided valuable guidance for flight planning and field activity purposes, and they may prove useful in forecasting ARs and better anticipating hydrometeorological extremes along the U.S. West Coast.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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