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Takumi Honda
,
Yousuke Sato
, and
Takemasa Miyoshi

Abstract

Lightning flash observations are closely associated with the development of convective clouds and have a potential for convective-scale data assimilation with high-resolution numerical weather prediction models. A main challenge with the ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) is that no ensemble members have nonzero lightning flashes in the places where a lightning flash is observed. In this situation, different model states provide all zero lightning, and the EnKF cannot assimilate the nonzero lightning data effectively. This problem is known as the zero-gradient issue. This study addresses the zero-gradient issue by adding regression-based ensemble perturbations derived from a statistical relationship between simulated lightning and atmospheric variables in the whole computational domain. Regression-based ensemble perturbations are applied if the number of ensemble members with nonzero lightning flashes is smaller than a prescribed threshold (N min). Observing system simulation experiments for a heavy precipitation event in Japan show that regression-based ensemble perturbations increase the ensemble spread and successfully induce the analysis increments associated with convection even if only a few members have nonzero lightning flashes. Furthermore, applying regression-based ensemble perturbations improves the forecast accuracy of precipitation although the improvement is sensitive to the choice of N min.

Significance Statement

This study develops an effective method to use lightning flash observations for weather prediction. Lightning flash observations include precious information of the inner structure of clouds, but their effective use for weather prediction is not straightforward since a weather prediction model often misses observed lightning flashes. Our new method uses ensemble-generated statistical relationships to compensate for the misses and successfully improves the forecast accuracy of heavy rains in a simulated case. Our future work will test the method with real observation data.

Open access
Wataru Yanase
,
Udai Shimada
,
Naoko Kitabatake
, and
Eigo Tochimoto

Abstract

Tropical transition (TT) is a cyclogenesis process in which a baroclinic disturbance is transformed into a tropical cyclone. Many studies have analyzed TT events over the North Atlantic. This study assesses TT processes from a possible subtropical cyclone to Tropical Storm Kirogi at a relatively high latitude over the western North Pacific in an environment of enhanced baroclinicity in August 2012. Analyses based on satellite observations, the JRA-55 reanalysis, and a simulation with 2.5-km horizontal grid spacing demonstrate three stages during the TT: the baroclinic, intermediate, and convective stages. Over the baroclinic stage, Kirogi had an asymmetric comma-shaped cloud pattern with convection in the northern and eastern parts of the cyclone. This convection is attributed to quasigeostrophic forcing and frontogenesis associated with advection of warm and moist air. Vorticity locally generated by this convection was advected to the cyclone center by cyclone-relative northerly flow. Kirogi also had a shallow warm-core structure due to the interaction with an upper-level cold trough extending from the midlatitudes. In the intermediate stage, the warm and moist air in the lower troposphere and the cold trough in the upper troposphere wrapped around Kirogi. In the convective stage, Kirogi attained characteristics of a typical tropical cyclone with convection concentrated near the cyclone center and a deep warm-core structure. These results demonstrate that baroclinic processes can directly trigger formation of a tropical storm at relatively high latitudes over the western North Pacific in a similar manner to that over the North Atlantic.

Significance Statement

Tropical cyclogenesis is an important process for early identification of tropical cyclone hazards. Tropical transition is a tropical cyclogenesis process that is triggered by a subtropical or extratropical disturbance. It is unique to relatively high latitudes and has social importance particularly for midlatitude countries. There have been fewer studies on tropical transition over the western North Pacific than over the North Atlantic. This study demonstrates the dynamics of a distinct tropical transition event that led to the formation of Tropical Storm Kirogi (2012) at a relatively high latitude over the western North Pacific.

Open access
Xiangzhou Song
,
Xinyue Wang
,
Wenbo Cai
, and
Xuehan Xie

Abstract

This study presents observational findings of air–sea turbulent heat flux anomalies during the onset of the South China Sea summer monsoon (SCSSM) in 2021 and explains the mechanism for high-resolution heat flux variations. Turbulent heat flux discrepancies are not uniform throughout the basin but indicate a significant regional disparity in the South China Sea (SCS), which also experiences evident year-to-year variability. Based on buoy- and cruise-based air–sea measurements, high-temporal-resolution (less than hourly) anomalies in the latent heat flux during the SCSSM burst are unexpectedly determined by sea–air humidity differences instead of wind effects under near-neutral and mixed marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) stability conditions. However, latent heat anomalies are mainly induced by wind speed under changing MABL conditions. The sensible heat flux is much weaker, with its anomalies dominated by sea–air temperature differences regardless of the boundary layer condition. The observational results are used to examine the discrepancies in turbulent heat fluxes and associated air–sea variables in reanalysis products. The comparisons indicate that latent and sensible heat fluxes in the reanalysis are overestimated by approximately 55 and 3 W m−2, respectively. These overestimations are mainly induced by higher estimates of sea–air humidity/temperature differences. The relative humidity is underestimated by approximately 4.2% in the two high-resolution reanalysis products. The higher SST (near-surface specific humidity) and lower air temperature (specific air humidity) eventually lead to higher estimates of sea–air humidity/temperature differences (1.75 g kg−1/0.25°C), which are the dominant factors controlling the variations in the air–sea turbulent heat fluxes.

Significance Statement

Air–sea interactions are significant in predicting the onset of East Asian monsoon systems, including the SCSSM. During the SCSSM in 2021, four buoys and cruise observations are used to investigate anomalies in the latent and sensible heat fluxes. The physical mechanism of the variations in turbulent heat fluxes under different MABL stability conditions is explored in this study. The humidity and wind speed anomalies play roles under mixed boundary conditions in determining the high-resolution variations in latent heat fluxes. Based on these observational results, the heat fluxes and associated air–sea variables from reanalysis products are compared to identify the differences in the operational systems. These comparison results can help improve the reanalysis to obtain better monsoon predictions.

Open access
Karim Ali
,
David M. Schultz
,
Alistair Revell
,
Timothy Stallard
, and
Pablo Ouro

Abstract

To simulate the large-scale impacts of wind farms, wind turbines are parameterized within mesoscale models in which grid sizes are typically much larger than turbine scales. Five wind-farm parameterizations were implemented in the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model v4.3.3 to simulate multiple operational wind farms in the North Sea, which were verified against a satellite image, airborne measurements, and the FINO-1 meteorological mast data on 14 October 2017. The parameterization by Volker et al. underestimated the turbulence and wind speed deficit compared to measurements and to the parameterization of Fitch et al., which is the default in WRF. The Abkar and Porté-Agel parameterization gave close predictions of wind speed to that of Fitch et al. with a lower magnitude of predicted turbulence, although the parameterization was sensitive to a tunable constant. The parameterization by Pan and Archer resulted in turbine-induced thrust and turbulence that were slightly less than that of Fitch et al., but resulted in a substantial drop in power generation due to the magnification of wind speed differences in the power calculation. The parameterization by Redfern et al. was not substantially different from Fitch et al. in the absence of conditions such as strong wind veer. The simulations indicated the need for a turbine-induced turbulence source within a wind-farm parameterization for improved prediction of near-surface wind speed, near-surface temperature, and turbulence. The induced turbulence was responsible for enhancing turbulent momentum flux near the surface, causing a local speed-up of near-surface wind speed inside a wind farm. Our findings highlighted that wakes from large offshore wind farms could extend 100 km downwind, reducing downwind power production as in the case of the 400-MW Bard Offshore 1 wind farm whose power output was reduced by the wakes of the 402-MW Veja Mate wind farm for this case study.

Significance Statement

Because wind farms are smaller than the common grid spacing of numerical weather prediction models, the impacts of wind farms on the weather have to be indirectly incorporated through parameterizations. Several approaches to parameterization are available and the most appropriate scheme is not always clear. The absence of a turbulence source in a parameterization leads to substantial inaccuracies in predicting near-surface wind speed and turbulence over a wind farm. The impact of large clusters of offshore wind turbines in the wind field can exceed 100 km downwind, resulting in a substantial loss of power for downwind turbines. The prediction of this power loss can be sensitive to the chosen parameterization, contributing to uncertainty in wind-farm economic planning.

Open access
Brice E. Coffer
,
Matthew D. Parker
,
John M. Peters
, and
Andrew R. Wade

Abstract

The development and intensification of low-level mesocyclones in supercell thunderstorms have often been attributed, at least in part, to augmented streamwise vorticity generated baroclinically in the forward flank of supercells. However, the ambient streamwise vorticity of the environment (often quantified via storm-relative helicity), especially near the ground, is particularly skillful at discriminating between nontornadic and tornadic supercells. This study investigates whether the origins of the inflow air into supercell low-level mesocyclones, both horizontally and vertically, can help explain the dynamical role of environmental versus storm-generated vorticity in the development of low-level mesocyclone rotation. Simulations of supercells, initialized with wind profiles common to supercell environments observed in nature, show that the air bound for the low-level mesocyclone primarily originates from the ambient environment (rather than from along the forward flank) and from very close to the ground, often in the lowest 200–400 m of the atmosphere. Given that the near-ground environmental air comprises the bulk of the inflow into low-level mesocyclones, this likely explains the forecast skill of environmental streamwise vorticity in the lowest few hundred meters of the atmosphere. The low-level mesocyclone does not appear to require much augmentation from the development of additional horizontal vorticity in the forward flank. Instead, the dominant contributor to vertical vorticity within the low-level mesocyclone is from the environmental horizontal vorticity. This study provides further context to the ongoing discussion regarding the development of rotation within supercell low-level mesocyclones.

Significance Statement

Supercell thunderstorms produce the majority of tornadoes, and a defining characteristic of supercells is their rotating updraft, known as the “mesocyclone.” When the mesocyclone is stronger at lower altitudes, the likelihood of tornadoes increases. The purpose of this study is to understand if the rotation of the mesocyclone in supercells is due to horizontal spin present in the ambient environment or whether additional horizontal spin generated by the storm itself primarily drives this rotation. Our results suggest that inflow air into supercells and low-level mesocyclone rotation are mainly due to the properties of the environmental inflow air, especially near the ground. This hopefully provides further context to how our community views the development of low-level mesocyclones in supercells.

Open access
Samantha Ferrett
,
John Methven
,
Steven J. Woolnough
,
Gui-Ying Yang
,
Christopher E. Holloway
, and
Gabriel Wolf

Abstract

Equatorial waves are a major driver of widespread convection in Southeast Asia and the tropics more widely, a region in which accurate heavy rainfall forecasts are still a challenge. Conditioning rainfall over land on local equatorial wave phases finds that heavy rainfall can be between 2 and 4 times more likely to occur in Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Equatorial waves are identified in a global numerical weather prediction ensemble forecast [Met Office Global and Regional Ensemble Prediction System (MOGREPS-G)]. Skill in the ensemble forecast of wave activity is highly dependent on region and time of year, although generally forecasts of equatorial Rossby waves and westward-moving mixed Rossby–gravity waves are substantially more skillful than for the eastward-moving Kelvin wave. The observed statistical relationship between wave phases and rainfall is combined with ensemble forecasts of dynamical wave fields to construct hybrid dynamical–statistical forecasts of rainfall probability using a Bayesian approach. The Brier skill score is used to assess the skill of forecasts of rainfall probability. Skill in the hybrid forecasts can exceed that of probabilistic rainfall forecasts taken directly from MOGREPS-G and can be linked to both the skill in forecasts of wave activity and the relationship between equatorial waves and heavy rainfall in the relevant region. The results show that there is potential for improvements of forecasts of high-impact weather using this method as forecasts of large-scale waves improve.

Open access
Juanzhen Sun
,
Rumeng Li
,
Qinghong Zhang
,
Stanley B. Trier
,
Zhuming Ying
, and
Jun Xu

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to diagnose mesoscale factors responsible for the formation and development of an extreme rainstorm that occurred on 20 July 2021 in Zhengzhou, China. The rainstorm produced 201.9 mm of rainfall in 1 h, breaking the record of mainland China for 1-h rainfall accumulation in the past 73 years. Using 2-km continuously cycled analyses with 6-min updates that were produced by assimilating observations from radar and dense surface networks with a four-dimensional variational (4DVar) data assimilation system, we illustrate that the modification of environmental easterlies by three mesoscale disturbances played a critical role in the development of the rainstorm. Among the three systems, a mesobeta-scale low pressure system (mesolow) that developed from an inverted trough southwest of Zhengzhou was key to the formation and intensification of the rainstorm. We show that the rainstorm formed via sequential merging of three convective cells, which initiated along the convergence bands in the mesolow. Further, we present evidence to suggest that the mesolow and two terrain-influenced flows near the Taihang Mountains north of Zhengzhou, including a barrier jet and a downslope flow, contributed to the local intensification of the rainstorm and the intense 1-h rainfall. The three mesoscale features coexisted near Zhengzhou in the several hours before the extreme 1-h rainfall and enhanced local wind convergence and moisture transport synergistically. Our analysis also indicated that the strong midlevel south/southwesterly winds from the mesolow along with the gravity-current-modified low-level northeasterly barrier jet enhanced the vertical wind shear, which provided favorable local environment supporting the severe rainstorm.

Open access
Kosuke Ito
,
Soichiro Hirano
,
Jae-Deok Lee
, and
Johnny C. L. Chan

Abstract

Recent idealized simulations have shown that a system of binary tropical cyclones (TCs) induces vertical wind shear (VWS) in each TC, which can subsequently modify the tracks of these TCs through asymmetric diabatic heating. This study investigates these three-dimensional effects in the western North Pacific using the best track and ERA5 reanalysis data. The TC motion was found to deviate systematically from the steering flow. The direction of deviation is clockwise and repelling with respect to the midpoint of the binary TCs with a separation distance of more than 1000 km. The large-scale upper-level anticyclonic and lower-level cyclonic circulations serve as the VWS for each TC in a manner consistent with the idealized simulations. The VWS of a TC tends to be directed to the rear-left quadrant from the direction of the counterpart TC, where the maxima of rainfall and diabatic heating are observed. The potential vorticity budget analysis shows that the actual TC motion is modulated by the diabatic heating asymmetry that offsets the counterclockwise and approaching motion owing to horizontal advection when the separation distance of the binary TCs is 1000–2000 km. With a small separation distance (<1000 km), horizontal advection becomes significant, but the impact of diabatic heating asymmetry is not negligible. The abovementioned features are robust, while there are some dependencies on the TC intensities, size, circulation, duration, and geographical location. This research sheds light on the motion of binary TCs that has not been previously explained by a two-dimensional barotropic framework.

Open access
Simon C. Peatman
,
Cathryn E. Birch
,
Juliane Schwendike
,
John H. Marsham
,
Chris Dearden
,
Stuart Webster
,
Ryan R. Neely III
, and
Adrian J. Matthews

Abstract

The Maritime Continent experiences some of the world’s most severe convective rainfall, with an intense diurnal cycle. A key feature is offshore propagation of convection overnight, having peaked over land during the evening. Existing hypotheses suggest this propagation is due to the nocturnal land breeze and environmental wind causing low-level convergence; and/or gravity waves triggering convection as they propagate. We use a convection-permitting configuration of the Met Office Unified Model over Sumatra to test these hypotheses, verifying against observations from the Japanese Years of the Maritime Continent field campaign. In selected case studies there is an organized squall line propagating with the land-breeze density current, possibly reinforced by convective cold pools, at ∼3 m s−1 to around 150–300 km offshore. Propagation at these speeds is also seen in a composite mean diurnal cycle. The density current is verified by observations, with offshore low-level wind and virtual potential temperature showing a rapid decrease consistent with a density current front, accompanied by rainfall. Gravity waves are identified in the model with a typical phase speed of 16 m s−1. They trigger isolated cells of convection, usually farther offshore and with much weaker precipitation than the squall line. Occasionally, the isolated convection may deepen and the rainfall intensify, if the gravity wave interacts with a substantial preexisting perturbation such as shallow cloud. The localized convection triggered by gravity waves does not generally propagate at the wave’s own speed, but this phenomenon may appear as propagation along a wave trajectory in a composite that averages over many days of the diurnal cycle.

Significance Statement

The intense convection experienced by the Maritime Continent causes high-impact weather in the form of heavy precipitation, which can trigger floods and landslides, endangering human life and infrastructure. The geography of the region, with many islands with complex coastlines and orography, means that the spatial and temporal distributions of convection are difficult to predict. This presents challenges for operational forecasters in the region and introduces biases in weather and climate models, which may propagate globally. A key feature of the convection is its diurnal cycle and associated propagation offshore overnight from the islands. Although this phenomenon has been often investigated, there is no strong consensus in the literature on the mechanism or combination of mechanisms responsible. Improving our knowledge of these mechanisms and how they are represented in a convection-permitting model will assist forecasters in understanding how and when the propagation of intense convective storms occurs, and allow model developers to improve biases in numerical weather prediction and climate models.

Open access
Amal El Akkraoui
,
Nikki C. Privé
,
Ronald M. Errico
, and
Ricardo Todling

Abstract

This work describes the extension of the Global Modeling and Assimilation Office (GMAO) observing system simulation experiment (OSSE) framework to use a hybrid four-dimensional ensemble–variational (4D-EnVar) scheme instead of 3D-Var. The original 3D-Var and hybrid 4D-EnVar OSSEs use the same version of the data assimilation system (DAS) so that a direct comparison is possible in terms of the validation with respect to their corresponding real cases. Rather than quantifying the differences between the two data assimilation methodologies, a short intercomparison of upgrading from a 3D to a 4D OSSE is provided to highlight aspects where this change matters to the OSSE community and to identify particular features of data assimilation that can only be explored in a four-dimensional OSSE framework. A short validation of the hybrid 4D-EnVar OSSE shows that conclusions from previous assessments of the 3D-Var OSSE in its ability to mimic the behavior of the real system still hold with the same caveats. Furthermore, some aspects of the ensemble configuration and behavior are discussed along with forecast sensitivity to observation impacts (FSOI). Estimates of error standard deviations are shown to be smaller in the hybrid 4D-EnVar OSSE but with little impact on the character of the error. A discussion on future work directions focuses on exploring the four-dimensional aspect such as the error distribution within the assimilation window or four-dimensional handling of high-temporal density observations.

Open access