Terry Kucera (terry.kucera@nasa)STEREO Deputy Project Scientist
Flash-flood-producing storm events in Saudi Arabian Liping Deng 1, Matthew F. McCabe 2, Georgiy...
-
Upload
florence-carpenter -
Category
Documents
-
view
214 -
download
0
Transcript of Flash-flood-producing storm events in Saudi Arabian Liping Deng 1, Matthew F. McCabe 2, Georgiy...
Flash-flood-producing storm events in Saudi Arabian
Liping Deng1, Matthew F. McCabe2, Georgiy Stenchikov1, Jason P. Evans3 and Paul A. Kucera4
1 Physical Sciences and Engineering Division, King Abdullah University of Science & Technology, Thuwal, Saudi Arabia;2. Water Desalination and Reuse Center, Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering Division, King Abdullah University of Science & Technology, Thuwal, Saudi Arabia;3. Climate Change Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia;4. NCAR Research Applications Laboratory, Boulder, CO, USA
Outline
• Why? Flash floods at Jeddah Jeddah topography Synoptic features for Jeddah flash floods
• How? Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model setup
• Results Evaluation of extreme values and evolution of storm events Impact of model resolution on storm reproduction Impact of cumulus scheme at 5km-resolution intermediate domain
• Conclusion
Why?
• Monitoring and forecasting flash-flood-producing storm events
http://www.taqribnews.com/vglaemne.49nmy4hkt6g14.,.html
Jeddah topography
(Saud 2010)
Synoptic features
• Case 1: 2009 Nov. 24 00 – 26 00• Case 2: 2010 Dec. 29 00 – 31 00• Case 3: 2011 Jan. 14 00 – 16 00
• Synoptic features at initial time point
Synoptic features
• U / V wind component (m/s; vector) • Geopotential height (m; color contour)
Case1 Case2 Case3
700 hPa U/V and geopotential heigt
Low –leveljet
L
HH
700 hPa trough
850 hPa U/V and geopotential heigt
Synoptic features
Case1 Case2 Case3
10-meter U/V, total column water vapour
850 hPa U/V and specific humidity
Low –leveljet
L
HH
700 hPa trough Moist base
• 850 hPa Specific humidity (g/kg)• Total column water vapour (mm)
Synoptic features
• Temperature (K; color contour) • Total column water vapour (mm; blue
dah line)
Case1 Case2 Case3
850 hPa U/V and Temperature
10-meter U/V, 2-meter Temperature
Low –leveljet
L
HH
700 hPa trough
Temperature
Low troposphereconvergence zone
Moist base
Initial synoptic features
H
Trough Low troposphereconvergence zone
Jeddah
Temperature
Moist base
Low level jet
H
L
• Schematic plot of initial synoptic features for all three cases:
The red dot indicates Jeddah. “H” refers to anticyclone and “L” refers to
the cyclone. The figure also represents the moisture
base (green triangle), low-tropospheric convergence zone (purple oval), low-level jet (blue oval), trough (brown line) and temperature (red dashed line).
• Two anticyclones separated by a cyclone (L)
• A trough • Low-level jet zone ahead of the
trough• Strong moist tongue covering the
Jeddah area • A strong convergence zone around
Jeddah.
• Each test case is a nested on-way run with spectral nudging in the upper troposphere (<500 hPa) for parent domain (D1) only
• The model has been integrated with two nested domains. D1 has 208× 176 grid points in the horizontal with 25-km grid spacing. D2 has 336× 416 grid points with 5-km grid spacing. D3 has 256 × 176 grid points with 1-km grid spacing.
WRF model setup
D1-25km D2-5km D3-1km
Topography height (m)
WRF model setup
• WRF3.5 • 2009 Nov. 24 00 – 26 00 (48 hours) for
case 1• 2010 Dec. 29 00 – 31 00 for case 2• 2011 Jan. 14 00 – 16 00 for case 3 • ERA-Interim (Meteorology IC and BC)• Time step = 30s, output hourly• Vertical levels = 50
Physics optionmp_physics 2/5 (Lin/Eta)ra_lw_physics 4 (RRTMG)ra_sw_physics 4 (RRTMG)sf_sfclay_physics 2 (Janjic Eta)sf_surface_physics 2 (Noah)bl_pbl_physics 2 (MYJ)cu_physics 1/5 (KF/Grell)
ResultsAtmospheric state
• Simulated Case 1 • Jeddah (King Abdul Aziz Airport)
(lat=21.7N; lon=39.18E) • University of Wyoming sounding
data• 2009 Nov. 25 12:00
• WRF could reproduce local temperature and moisture conditions
http://weather.uwyo.edu/upperair/sounding.html
ResultsAt the rain gauge station
• Jeddah rain gauge station (21.5°N; 39.2°E).• Accumulated 48-hour rainfall (mm) for Case 1 (a), Case 2
(b) and Case 3 (c).• The red line is the hourly WRF simulations, the blue line
is the TRMM data, the black dashed line is the daily rain gauge data and the green line is the Taif radar rainfall data.
• In general, the WRF simulations in Jeddah are comparable to the observations, especially for the rain-gauge station observations.
a)
b)
c)
Case 1
Case 2
Case 3
ResultsOver the Jeddah catchment
a)
c)
e)
b)
d)
f)
Case 1
Case 2
Case 3
• Averaged over the Jeddah catchment.
• Accumulated 48-hour rainfall (mm; a, c and e) and precipitation rate (mm hr-1; b, d and f) for Case 1 (a-b), Case 2 (c-d) and Case 3 (e-f).
• The red line is for WRF simulations (D3-1km), the blue line is for TRMM rainfall data and the green line is for the Taif radar rainfall data.
• The rainfall peaks associated with the individual rain events generally are captured reasonably well for the Jeddah catchment with some temporal shifts in either peak or storm initiation time for Case 1 and Case 3.
ResultsEvolution of rainstorm
• Hourly time evolution of rainstorms (mm) for Case 1 from Taif radar data (left column) and WRF (right column) D3-1km. The white circle is for downtown Jeddah.
• Precipitation radar dataset collected by an C-Band Doppler located near city of Taif which is east of Jeddah (Kucera et al. 2010).
• Observed rainstorm extends in a direction from the southwest to the northeast, perpendicular to the direction of movement of the storm center (from the northwest to the southeast).
• WRF model with nesting has the capability to forecast extreme weather event (Heavy rainfall / mesoscale convective systems) with some temporal and spatial displacement.
D3-1km
Radar
WRF
ResultsDomain 2 – 5 km vs. Domain 3 – 1 km
• Downscaling will not necessarily improve model simulations of heavy rainfall in all cases (e.g., Almazroui 2011).
• Jeddah region has complex orographic and geographic features, such as a mountain range close to the city and a land-ocean boundary, that warrant model simulation improvements along with an increasing resolution (e.g., from 5 km to 1 km).
• Explore the rainfall comparisons of results from Domain 2 with 5 km resolution (D2-5km) and Domain 3 with 1 km resolution (D3-1km).
ResultsDomain 2 – 5 km vs. Domain 3 – 1 km
• Accumulated rainfall (mm; a-b) at Jeddah station, accumulated rainfall (mm; c-d) averaged over the Jeddah catchment and precipitation rate (mm hr-1; e-f) averaged over the Jeddah catchment from WRF D3-1km (left; a, c and e) and D2-5km (right; b, d and f) for Case 1.
• The red line is for WRF simulations, the blue line is for TRMM rainfall data, the green line is for the Taif radar rainfall data and the black line is for the daily rain gauge data.
Station
Catchment
Catchment
a) b)
c) d)
e) f)
D3-1km D2-5km
• Simulation with higher horizontal grid resolution (e.g., D3-1km) generally has a better capacity in reproducing heavy rainfall, especially for the extreme value.
ResultsDomain 2 – 5 km vs. Domain 3 – 1 km
• Vertical profile of divergence (10-5 s-
1; a), upward motion (m s-1; b), relative humidity (%; c) and equivalent potential temperature (K; d) averaged over the Jeddah catchment during rainstorms for the mean of all three cases from D3-1km (red line) and D2-5km (blue line).
• Stronger deep convective activity and its associated features are the main reasons for the enhancement of heavy rainfall in the simulations around Jeddah area, when downscaling from D2-5km to D3-1km.
a) b)
c) d)
ResultsImpact of cumulus scheme at 5km-resolution intermediate domain
Cu_physics D1-25km D2-5km D3-1km
Test-1 (Grell-D1) Grell No No
Test-2 (KF-D1) KF No No
Test-3 (Grell-D1.D2) Grell Grell No
Test-4 (KF-D1.D2) KF KF No
• No comprehensive guidance on the use of a dedicated cumulus scheme at the intermediate resolutions between approximately 3-10 kilometers .
• To explore the most appropriate reproduction of the flash-flood events, we examine the use of the cumulus scheme in Domain 2 at the 5km-resolution.
• Through comparisons of Grell-D1 with Grell-D1.D2 and KF-D1 with KF-D1.D2, we can
explore the impact of the use of cumulus scheme at 5km-resolution in Domain 2 for heavy rainfall simulations.
ResultsImpact of cumulus scheme at 5km-resolution intermediate domain
• Time evolution of accumulated rainfall (mm) at Jeddah station (a), and accumulated rainfall (mm; b) and precipitation rate (mm hr-1; c) averaged over the Jeddah catchment for Case 1 from the Taif radar, rain gauge (daily), TRMM and WRF (D3-1km).
a)
b)
c)
Station
Catchment
Catchment
• Simulated rainfall in the Jeddah region is enhanced if the intermediate 5-km Domain 2 does not use a cumulus scheme .
ResultsImpact of cumulus scheme at 5km-resolution intermediate domain
a) b)
c) d)
• Vertical profiles of divergence (10-5 s-1; a), upward motion (m s-1; b), relative humidity (%; c) and equivalent potential temperature (K; d) averaged over the Jeddah catchment during the rainstorms for the mean of all three cases from WRF (D3-1km).
• Test cases without a cumulus scheme at the intermediate domain (D2-5km) resolution lead to a stronger deep convection with a more wet and warm environment in the middle-upper troposphere of D3-1km, corresponding to a rainfall enhancement.
Conclusion
• Mesoscale convective systems associated with strong moisture convergence ahead of a trough were the major initial features for the occurrence of these intense rain events.
• Localized extreme values of heavy rainfall and the duration of rainstorms within the Jeddah catchment area can be captured reasonably well by a convection-permitting WRF model, albeit with some displacement of rainstorm events.
• Through the comparison between Domains 2 and 3, it is found that higher-resolution topography in the WRF model over the Jeddah area generally contributes to an enhancement of local deep convective systems and the related heavy rainfall intensities.
• Compared to the intermediate Domain 2 (5km-resolution) with a cumulus scheme, the one without a cumulus scheme shows positive impacts on Domain 3’s deep convective activity, which leads to a larger localized volume of rainfall.
Thank you very much!
• Questions?