A Multiscale, Hydrometeorological Forecast Evaluation of National Water Model Forecasts of the May 2018 Ellicott City, Maryland, Flood

Author:

Viterbo Francesca12,Mahoney Kelly2,Read Laura3,Salas Fernando4,Bates Bradford5,Elliott Jason6,Cosgrove Brian7,Dugger Aubrey3,Gochis David3,Cifelli Robert2

Affiliation:

1. a CIRES, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

2. b NOAA/Physical Sciences Division, Boulder, Colorado

3. c National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

4. d NOAA/National Water Center, Tuscaloosa, Alabama

5. e Lynker Technologies, NOAA/National Water Center, Tuscaloosa, Alabama

6. f National Weather Service Baltimore/Washington Forecast Office, Sterling, Virginia

7. g Office of Hydrologic Development, NOAA/National Weather Service, Silver Spring, Maryland

Abstract

AbstractThe NOAA National Water Model (NWM) became operational in August 2016, producing the first ever real-time, distributed, continuous set of hydrologic forecasts over the continental United States (CONUS). This project uses integrated hydrometeorological assessment methods to investigate the utility of the NWM to predict catastrophic flooding associated with an extreme rainfall event that occurred in Ellicott City, Maryland, on 27–28 May 2018. Short-range forecasts (0–18-h lead time) from the NWM version 1.2 are explored, focusing on the quantitative precipitation forecast (QPF) forcing from the High-Resolution Rapid Refresh (HRRR) model and the corresponding NWM streamflow forecast. A comprehensive assessment of multiscale hydrometeorological processes are considered using a combination of object-based, grid-based, and hydrologic point-based verification. Results highlight the benefits and risks of using a distributed hydrologic modeling tool such as the NWM to connect operational CONUS-scale atmospheric forcings to local impact predictions. For the Ellicott City event, reasonably skillful QPF in several HRRR model forecast cycles produced NWM streamflow forecasts in the small Ellicott City basin that were suggestive of flash flood potential. In larger surrounding basins, the NWM streamflow response was more complex, and errors were found to be governed by both hydrologic process representation, as well as forcing errors. The integrated, hydrometeorological multiscale analysis method demonstrated here guides both research and ongoing model development efforts, along with providing user education and engagement to ultimately engender improved flash flood prediction.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference41 articles.

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2. Bullock, R., B.Brown, and T.Fowler, 2016: Method for object-based diagnostic evaluation. NCAR Tech. Note NCAR/TN-532+STR, 84 pp., https://doi.org/10.5065/D61V5CBS.

3. A multiscale evaluation of multisensor quantitative precipitation estimates in the Russian River basin;Bytheway;J. Hydrometeor.,2019

4. CONUS-wide evaluation of National Weather Service flash flood guidance products;Clark;Wea. Forecasting,2014

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