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TOWARD CONVECTIVE-SCALE PREDICTION WITHIN THE NEXT GENERATION GLOBAL PREDICTION SYSTEM
by
Zhou, Linjiong
, Chen, Xi
, Rees, Shannon L.
, Chen, Jan-Huey
, Lin, Shian-Jiann
, Harris, Lucas M.
in
Boundary conditions
/ Cloud microphysics
/ Computational fluid dynamics
/ Computer simulation
/ Convection
/ Data assimilation
/ Diurnal
/ Diurnal cycle
/ Diurnal variations
/ Energy conservation
/ Extreme weather
/ Finite element method
/ Fluid dynamics
/ Geophysical fluids
/ Geophysics
/ Hurricanes
/ Hydrodynamics
/ Laboratories
/ Mathematical models
/ Mesoscale phenomena
/ Microphysics
/ Plains
/ Precipitation
/ Prototypes
/ Resolution
/ Squalls
/ Statistical methods
/ Weather forecasting
2019
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TOWARD CONVECTIVE-SCALE PREDICTION WITHIN THE NEXT GENERATION GLOBAL PREDICTION SYSTEM
by
Zhou, Linjiong
, Chen, Xi
, Rees, Shannon L.
, Chen, Jan-Huey
, Lin, Shian-Jiann
, Harris, Lucas M.
in
Boundary conditions
/ Cloud microphysics
/ Computational fluid dynamics
/ Computer simulation
/ Convection
/ Data assimilation
/ Diurnal
/ Diurnal cycle
/ Diurnal variations
/ Energy conservation
/ Extreme weather
/ Finite element method
/ Fluid dynamics
/ Geophysical fluids
/ Geophysics
/ Hurricanes
/ Hydrodynamics
/ Laboratories
/ Mathematical models
/ Mesoscale phenomena
/ Microphysics
/ Plains
/ Precipitation
/ Prototypes
/ Resolution
/ Squalls
/ Statistical methods
/ Weather forecasting
2019
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Do you wish to request the book?
TOWARD CONVECTIVE-SCALE PREDICTION WITHIN THE NEXT GENERATION GLOBAL PREDICTION SYSTEM
by
Zhou, Linjiong
, Chen, Xi
, Rees, Shannon L.
, Chen, Jan-Huey
, Lin, Shian-Jiann
, Harris, Lucas M.
in
Boundary conditions
/ Cloud microphysics
/ Computational fluid dynamics
/ Computer simulation
/ Convection
/ Data assimilation
/ Diurnal
/ Diurnal cycle
/ Diurnal variations
/ Energy conservation
/ Extreme weather
/ Finite element method
/ Fluid dynamics
/ Geophysical fluids
/ Geophysics
/ Hurricanes
/ Hydrodynamics
/ Laboratories
/ Mathematical models
/ Mesoscale phenomena
/ Microphysics
/ Plains
/ Precipitation
/ Prototypes
/ Resolution
/ Squalls
/ Statistical methods
/ Weather forecasting
2019
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TOWARD CONVECTIVE-SCALE PREDICTION WITHIN THE NEXT GENERATION GLOBAL PREDICTION SYSTEM
Journal Article
TOWARD CONVECTIVE-SCALE PREDICTION WITHIN THE NEXT GENERATION GLOBAL PREDICTION SYSTEM
2019
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Overview
The Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) has developed a new variable-resolution global model with the ability to represent convective-scale features that serves as a prototype of the Next Generation Global Prediction System (NGGPS). The goal of this prediction system is to maintain the skill in large-scale features while simultaneously improving the prediction skill of convectively driven mesoscale phenomena. This paper demonstrates the new capability of this model in convective-scale prediction relative to the current operational Global Forecast System (GFS). This model uses the stretched-grid functionality of the Finite-Volume Cubed-Sphere Dynamical Core (FV3) to refine the global 13-km uniform-resolution model down to 4-km convection-permitting resolution over the contiguous United States (CONUS), and implements the GFDL single-moment 6-category cloud microphysics to improve the representation of moist processes. Statistics gathered from two years of simulations by the GFS and select configurations of the FV3-based model are carefully examined. The variable-resolution FV3-based model is shown to possess global forecast skill comparable with that of the operational GFS while quantitatively improving skill and better representing the diurnal cycle within the high-resolution area compared to the uniform mesh simulations. Forecasts of the occurrence of extreme precipitation rates over the southern Great Plains are also shown to improve with the variable-resolution model. Case studies are provided of a squall line and a hurricane to demonstrate the effectiveness of the variable-resolution model to simulate convective-scale phenomena.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Subject
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