Dissertação
Parametrização de turbulência na previsibilidade de temperaturas mínimas em um modelo de mesoescala
Fecha
2014-06-02Registro en:
BATTISTI, Adriano. Turbulence parameterization on predictability of minimum temperatures in a mesoscale model. 2014. 92 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Geociências) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2014.
Autor
Battisti, Adriano
Institución
Resumen
The present study aims to evaluate the quality of nocturnal temperature forecast
made by a mesoscale numerical model and to understand the reasons behind the difficulties
found. To do that, the Weather Research and Forecast (WRF) model is used,
with the same configuration employed for operational weather forecast. The model has
been ran for the 31 nights of July 2012, and temperature outputs have been compared
to hourly observations measured by 26 weather stations scattered over the entire state of
Rio Grande do Sul. Four different schemes for turbulence have been considered. Three
of them, Yonsei University (YSU), Mellor Yamada Janjic (MYJ) and Bougeault-Lacarrere
(BOU) are formulations available from WRF code, while the fourth, Bougeault-Lacarrere
Modified (BOU-Mod) is a change made to BOU, aiming at making it less turbulent. A
general analysis shows that the different formulations present similar root mean squared
errors (EQM), with YSU showing slightly smaller errors than the others. An important discrepancy
found refers to the fact that there is an appreciable difference between station
real altitude and its altitude in the model, which is given by the height of the closest grid
point. When such an altitude difference is corrected by a potential temperature, the errors
are enhanced. In this case, the most turbulent formulations, YSU and BOU, tend to
overestimate nocturnal temperatures, while the least turbulent ones, MYJ and BOU-Mod,
tend to underestimate it. All schemes presented a tendency to underestimate the observed
temporal variability. It means that they tend to overestimate the coldest observations
and to underestimate the warmest ones. In the most stable nights, all parameterizations
showed large EQM and overestimate the temperature. In the least stable nights there were
some cases with reduced EQM, but all formulations tended to underestimate temperature,
showing that it is necessary to increase the turbulent mixing in this cases. When the different
stations are compared, it becomes evident that the height difference between station
and model altitudes has a large influence in the nighttime temperature weather forecast.
It happens mainly because stations lower than the nearest grid point the modeled winds
tend to be larger than observed, causing more intense turbulent mixing and leading to
warmer temperatures. The opposite happens in stations higher than the grid point. Such
a situation occurs mainly in the more stable conditions, when the lower regions tend to
have its surface decoupling from the higher atmospheric levels. The implications of these
results and suggestions for improving nocturnal temperature forecasts are presented.