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Impact of Radar Reflectivity Data Assimilation Frequency on Convection-Allowing Forecasts of Diverse Cases over the Continental United States.

Authors :
Yang, Yue
Wang, Xuguang
Source :
Monthly Weather Review. Feb2023, Vol. 151 Issue 2, p341-362. 22p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts, 12 Graphs, 1 Map.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The sensitivity of convection-allowing forecasts over the continental United States to radar reflectivity data assimilation (DA) frequency is explored within the Gridpoint Statistical Interpolation (GSI)-based ensemble–variational (EnVar) system. Experiments with reflectivity DA intervals of 60, 20, and 5 min (RAIN60, RAIN20, and RAIN5, respectively) are conducted using 10 diverse cases. Quantitative verification indicates that the degree of sensitivity depends on storm features during the radar DA period. Five developing storms show high sensitivity, whereas five mature or decaying storms do not. The 20-min interval is the most reliable given its best overall performance compared to the 5- and 60-min intervals. Diagnostics suggest that the differences in analyzed cold pools (ACPs) among RAIN60, RAIN20, and RAIN5 vary by storm features during the radar DA period. Such ACP differences result in different forecast skills. In the case where RAIN20 outperforms RAIN60 and the case where RAIN5 outperforms RAIN20, assimilation of reflectivity with a higher frequency commonly produces enhanced and widespread ACPs, promoting broader storms that match better with reality than a lower frequency. In the case where RAIN5 performs worse than RAIN20, the model imbalance of RAIN5 overwhelms information gain associated with frequent assimilation, producing overestimated and spuriously fast-moving ACPs. In the cases where little sensitivity to the reflectivity DA frequency is found, similar ACPs are produced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00270644
Volume :
151
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Monthly Weather Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161845454
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1175/MWR-D-22-0095.1