Simulation of Convective Initiation during IHOP_2002 Using the Flux-Adjusting Surface Data Assimilation System (FASDAS)

Author:

Childs Peter P.1,Qureshi Aneela L.1,Raman Sethu1,Alapaty Kiran1,Ellis Robb1,Boyles Ryan1,Niyogi Dev2

Affiliation:

1. State Climate Office of North Carolina, and Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina

2. Departments of Agronomy and Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana

Abstract

Abstract The Flux-Adjusting Surface Data Assimilation System (FASDAS) uses the surface observational analysis to directly assimilate surface layer temperature and water vapor mixing ratio and to indirectly assimilate soil moisture and soil temperature in numerical model predictions. Both soil moisture and soil temperature are important variables in the development of deep convection. In this study, FASDAS coupled within the fifth-generation Pennsylvania State University–NCAR Mesoscale Model (MM5) was used to study convective initiation over the International H2O Project (IHOP_2002) region, utilizing the analyzed surface observations collected during IHOP_2002. Two 72-h numerical simulations were performed. A control simulation was run that assimilated all available IHOP_2002 measurements into the standard MM5 four-dimensional data assimilation. An experimental simulation was also performed that assimilated all available IHOP_2002 measurements into the FASDAS version of the MM5, where surface observations were used for the FASDAS coupling. Results from this case study suggest that the use of FASDAS in the experimental simulation led to the generation of greater amounts of precipitation over a more widespread area as compared to the standard MM5 FDDA used in the control simulation. This improved performance is attributed to better simulation of surface heat fluxes and their gradients.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference12 articles.

1. Alapaty, K., D. S.Niyogi, and M.Alapaty, 2001a: Indirect assimilation of soil moisture availability in the MM5. Proc. 11th Penn State/NCAR MM5 Users' Workshop, Boulder, CO, Pennsylvania State University/NCAR. [Available online at http://www.mmm.ucar.edu/mm5/workshop/ws01/alapaty2.pdf.].

2. Alapaty, K., N. L.Seaman, D. S.Niyogi, M.Alapaty, G.Hunter, and D.Stauffer, 2001b: Evaluation of a Surface Data Assimilation technique using the MM5. Proc. 11th Penn State/NCAR MM5 Users' Workshop, Boulder, CO, Pennsylvania State University/NCAR. [Available online at http://www.mmm.ucar.edu/mm5/workshop/ws01/alapaty3.pdf.].

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