Evaluation of and Suggested Improvements to the WSM6 Microphysics in WRF-ARW Using Synthetic and Observed GOES-13 Imagery

Author:

Grasso Lewis1,Lindsey Daniel T.2,Sunny Lim Kyo-Sun3,Clark Adam4,Bikos Dan1,Dembek Scott R.5

Affiliation:

1. Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

2. NOAA/Center for Satellite Applications and Research, and Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

3. Atmospheric Sciences and Global Change Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington

4. National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma

5. Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, Norman, Oklahoma

Abstract

Abstract Synthetic satellite imagery can be employed to evaluate simulated cloud fields. Past studies have revealed that the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) single-moment 6-class (WSM6) microphysics scheme in the Advanced Research WRF (WRF-ARW) produces less upper-level ice clouds within synthetic images compared to observations. Synthetic Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-13 (GOES-13) imagery at 10.7 μm of simulated cloud fields from the 4-km National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) WRF-ARW is compared to observed GOES-13 imagery. Histograms suggest that too few points contain upper-level simulated ice clouds. In particular, side-by-side examples are shown of synthetic and observed anvils. Such images illustrate the lack of anvil cloud associated with convection produced by the 4-km NSSL WRF-ARW. A vertical profile of simulated hydrometeors suggests that too much cloud water mass may be converted into graupel mass, effectively reducing the main source of ice mass in a simulated anvil. Further, excessive accretion of ice by snow removes ice from an anvil by precipitation settling. Idealized sensitivity tests reveal that a 50% reduction of the accretion rate of ice by snow results in a significant increase in anvil ice of a simulated storm. Such results provide guidance as to which conversions could be reformulated, in a more physical manner, to increase simulated ice mass in the upper troposphere.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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