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The added value of convection permitting simulations of extreme precipitation events over the eastern Mediterranean.

Authors :
Zittis, G.
Bruggeman, A.
Camera, C.
Hadjinicolaou, P.
Lelieveld, J.
Source :
Atmospheric Research. Jul2017, Vol. 191, p20-33. 14p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Climate change is expected to substantially influence precipitation amounts and distribution. To improve simulations of extreme rainfall events, we analyzed the performance of different convection and microphysics parameterizations of the WRF (Weather Research and Forecasting) model at very high horizontal resolutions (12, 4 and 1 km). Our study focused on the eastern Mediterranean climate change hot-spot. Five extreme rainfall events over Cyprus were identified from observations and were dynamically downscaled from the ERA-Interim (EI) dataset with WRF. We applied an objective ranking scheme, using a 1-km gridded observational dataset over Cyprus and six different performance metrics, to investigate the skill of the WRF configurations. We evaluated the rainfall timing and amounts for the different resolutions, and discussed the observational uncertainty over the particular extreme events by comparing three gridded precipitation datasets ( E -OBS, APHRODITE and CHIRPS). Simulations with WRF capture rainfall over the eastern Mediterranean reasonably well for three of the five selected extreme events. For these three cases, the WRF simulations improved the ERA-Interim data, which strongly underestimate the rainfall extremes over Cyprus. The best model performance is obtained for the January 1989 event, simulated with an average bias of 4% and a modified Nash-Sutcliff of 0.72 for the 5-member ensemble of the 1-km simulations. We found overall added value for the convection-permitting simulations, especially over regions of high-elevation. Interestingly, for some cases the intermediate 4-km nest was found to outperform the 1-km simulations for low-elevation coastal parts of Cyprus. Finally, we identified significant and inconsistent discrepancies between the three, state of the art, gridded precipitation datasets for the tested events, highlighting the observational uncertainty in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01698095
Volume :
191
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
123404961
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosres.2017.03.002