doctoralThesis
Investigating the relationships between precipitable water vapor estimations and heavy rainfall over the Eastern Pacific Ocean and Ecuadorian regions
Fecha
2023-03-20Autor
Serrano Vincenti, María Sheila Fabiola
Institución
Resumen
Among the weather phenomena, rainfall is difficult to forecast, despite the theoretical and
technical challenges inherently related to its prediction, its impact in economic and everyday
activities, clearly justify its study. Numerical Weather Prediction Models are widely used to
predict rainfall, such as the Weather Research & Forecasting Model (WRF), However, they
underperform when is set to predict intense events and when working with complex and steep
topographies. Recent studies have proposed the estimation of Precipitable Water Vapor PWV,
as a tool that can help predict and understand the mechanisms that trigger intense rainfall.
PWV is mainly sourced from satellite products and from indirectly measurements which derive
it through the delay of the Global Navigation Positioning System (GNSS) signals quite
accurately. Thus, the present work studies the relationship between intense rain and satellite
sourced PWV over the ocean, the relationship of PWV-GNSS over the Coast, Sierra and
Amazon of Ecuador, and the comparison of the PWV-GNSS with the data modeled in WRF.
As main results, we point an empirical model between the satellite PWV and the maximum
values of rainfall over the ocean. In addition, PWV-GNSS loading and unloading periods
related to the diurnal cycle of rainfall over the land, and relationships with intense rain events
were identified; and finally, the main discrepancies between the observed PWV-GNSS data
and rainfall with WRF modeled data over areas of the Equatorial Andes.