Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

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Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder, CO Workshop on Polar Simulations with the WRF Model Columbus, OH November 2–3, 2011 WRF Real-Time Modeling in WRF Real-Time Modeling in Antarctica Under AMPS— Efforts Antarctica Under AMPS— Efforts and Issues and Issues

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WRF Real-Time Modeling in Antarctica Under AMPS— Efforts and Issues. Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder, CO Workshop on Polar Simulations with the WRF Model - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Page 1: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning

Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology DivisionNCAR Earth System Laboratory

National Center for Atmospheric ResearchBoulder, CO

Workshop on Polar Simulations with the WRF Model Columbus, OH

November 2–3, 2011

WRF Real-Time Modeling in WRF Real-Time Modeling in Antarctica Under AMPS— Efforts and Antarctica Under AMPS— Efforts and

IssuesIssues

Page 2: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

AMPS— The Antarctic Mesoscale Prediction System

• Real-time WRF to support US Antarctic Program Antarctic weather forecasting and science

• AMPS effort includes:

(i) WRF polar performance analysis

(ii) Physics improvement

http://www.mmm.ucar.edu/rt/amps

Page 3: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Motivations for AMPS: Antarctic Forecasting Needs

– Weaknesses seen in the NWP available to the McMurdo forecasters (circa 2000)

The Antarctic Weather Forecasting Workshop (May 2000, BPRC)

1) Inadequate resolution

To capture mesoscale wx features

To capture local topography

2) Need to improve high-latitude model performance

Better physics/parameterizations neededfor the Antarctic PBL / troposphere

– Proposed: A real-time mesoscale modeling system tailored for the USAP forecasters

Page 4: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

1.67 km

15 km

5 km

5 km

5 km

● McMurdo

45 km

15 km

Christchurch (CHC)

South Pole

McMurdo Station(MCM)

AMPS WRF (Nov. 2011)

Version 3.2.1

NB: The official, released WRF has been “Polar” since WRF V3.1, April ‘09

6 Grids: 45-, 15-, 5-, 1.67-km

McMurdo

Ross Is.

Palmer Station

Antarctic Peninsula

South Pole

Western Ross Sea

Primary air route: CHC–MCM

Topographyshaded

Page 5: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

AMPS WRF Configuration

Fcsts 45 km— 120 h 15 km— 120 h

5 km— 36 h 1.67 km— 36 h

Top: 10 mb Levels (η): 44 Lowest ½-η: 12 m AGL

Physics

LSM: Noah (w/ latest polar mods) PBL: MYJ scheme

Microphys: WSM 5-class Sfc layer: Eta scheme

Cu: Kain-Fritsch: 45-km,15-km Fully-explicit: 5-km, 1.67-km

LW rad: RRTMG SW rad: Goddard

Sea ice: Fractional representation Sea ice analyses: Nat’l Snow & Ice Data Center

Page 6: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

AMPS Plans for WRF Improvement

Goal: Improve WRF for Antarctica through polar modifications and model evaluation

1) Base AMPS Effort

a) Investigation of forecast clouds

– Evaluation of WRF microphysics to identify best performance for Antarctic conditions

b) Stable boundary layer performance

– Comparison of MYNN PBL scheme withMYJ scheme in stable conditions in Antarctica

Page 7: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

AMPS Plans for WRF Improvement (cont’d)

2) NSF OCI (Ofc of Cyberinfrastructure)– Supplemental Effort

a) Review, revise the organization of polar mods within WRF

– Shift ice-related mods from Noah to separate module

b) Prepare the revised code for next WRF release– Spring 2012

c) Investigate new polar capabilities

▪ Variable sea ice thickness

▪ Variable snow depth on sea ice

▪ Variable sea ice albedo

Page 8: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Real-Time WRF over Antarctica: Problems Encountered

1) Stability

• WRF blow-ups – Most often seen over Antarctic Peninsula in winter

– Assoc’d with: Strong winds over steep terrain

– WRF config adjustments

Shortened Δt

Increased w damping and depth of damping layer

• WRFDA Analysis

– Problems with Var failing or producing bad analyses

Page 9: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Real-Time WRF over Antarctica: Problems Encountered (cont’d)

– Variational bias correction (VBC) bug: Use of AMSU-A radiances w/ VBC

Wind speed (ms-1) Level: η1/2= 5 (approx. 25 mb)

WRFDA InputMin= 0 Max= 85

WRFDA OutputMin= 0 Max= 270

250 ms-170 ms-1

Page 10: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Real-Time WRF over Antarctica: Problems Encountered (cont’d)

2) Performance

– Wind speed low bias in high-wind events McMurdo

(E.g., May ‘04, Nov. ‘07, Apr. ‘09, Nov. ‘09)

– Warm sfc T biases in AMPS over Plateau

▪ Coastal sites, Ross Ice Shelf, West Antarctica show varyingwarm / cold biases

▪ Original, larger warm bias reduced in AMPS with cycling of subsurface temps from WRF (cf. GFS input)

Page 11: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Real-Time WRF over Antarctica: Problems Encountered (cont’d)

– Warm sfc T biases in AMPS over Plateau

Winter (Apr.–Jul. ‘11) Summer (Nov. ‘10-Jan. ‘11)

Obs WRF Obs WRF

Bias RMSE (°C) Bias RMSE (°C)

Fcst hr Fcst hr

Page 12: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Real-Time WRF over Antarctica: Problems Encountered (cont’d)

– Forecast cloud bias

▪ Lower-than-obsv’d cover over the Southern Ocean(Nicolas and Bromwich 2011)

▪ Q: What are impacts on incoming/outgoing radiation?

AMPS CloudSat / CALIPSO satellites

Monthly Mean Cloud Fraction

Feb. 2011

(from Nicolas and Bromwich 2011)

Page 13: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Re: Road to Improvement of WRF in AMPS

• Latest versions of WRF do not always immediately improve things

– Verification for warm and cold seasons in AMPS done before implementation

• Polar modification gains: Incremental, but steady

• Forecast improvements from assimilation of new data types individually small

– Large error reductions not seen as individual new obs types added: Small positive impacts

– Note: GFS first-guess in AMPS reflects prior DA

Page 14: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Advancing WRF for Polar Simulations: Possibilities

1) Restructuring of Current Polar Mods (Noah LSM)

– Revision effort in progress under AMPS

2) Subsurface Initialization (esp. for Antarctica)

– What different approaches are taken?

– Is there a best approach? (Approach may depend on the first guess)

3) Sea-ice Model Coupling

– Goal: Improved sea-ice treatment and evolution

Page 15: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Advancing WRF for Polar Simulations: Possibilities (cont’d)

4) Ocean Model Coupling

– How much need for high-latitude WRF?

5) Improved High-latitude Cloud Representation

Ex: WRF low bias over Southern Ocean

6) Radiation scheme improvements

Ex: Modified RRTM longwave scheme

– What are the current deficiencies?

Page 16: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

Advancing WRF for Polar Simulations: Possibilities (cont’d)

7) Blowing Snow Parameterization

– What are the possibilities? Coupled snow model?

8) Diamond Dust / Clear-sky Precip

– Significant source of pcp over Antarctic plateau

– Development of parameterization or forecast algorithm possible?

Page 17: Jordan G. Powers and Kevin W. Manning Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division

On Needs for WRF for High-Latitude Applications

• What are the need areas for WRF polar improvement?

– Can comprehensive list be compiled?

– Identification of 2–3 most pressing areas

– Better simulation of certain meteorological conditions? (e.g., fog, stable PBL, polar clouds)

– Reduction of specific forecast errors?

• What WRF physics areas easiest to improve for low-cost model advancement (i.e., low-hanging fruit)?

• Are there WRF deficiencies seen at one pole and not the other?