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Robert C. Jackson
,
Bhupendra A. Raut
,
Dario Dematties
,
Scott M. Collis
,
Nicola Ferrier
,
Pete Beckman
,
Rajesh Sankaran
,
Yongho Kim
,
Seongha Park
,
Sean Shahkarami
, and
Rob Newsom

Abstract

There is a need for long term observations of cloud and precipitation fall speeds for validating and improving rainfall forecasts from climate models. To this end, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) User Facility Southern Great Plains (SGP) site at Lamont, OK hosts five ARM Doppler lidars that can measure cloud and aerosol properties. In particular, the ARM Doppler lidars record Doppler spectra that contain information about the fall speeds of cloud and precipitation particles. However, due to bandwidth and storage constraints, the Doppler spectra are not routinely stored. This calls for the automation of cloud and rain detection in ARM Doppler lidar data so that the spectral data in clouds can be selectively saved and further analyzed. During the ARMing the Edge field experiment, a Waggle node capable of performing machine learning applications in situ was deployed at ARM’s SGP site for this purpose. In this paper, we develop and test four algorithms for the Waggle node to automatically classify ARM Doppler lidar data. We demonstrate that supervised learning using a ResNet50-based classifier will classify 97.6% of the clear air and 94.7% of cloudy images correctly, outperforming traditional peak detection methods. We also show that a convolutional autoencoder paired with k- means clustering identifies ten clusters in the ARM Doppler lidar data. Three clusters correspond to mostly clear conditions with scattered high clouds, and seven others correspond to cloudy conditions with varying cloud base heights.

Open access
Oscar Guzman
and
Haiyan Jiang

Abstract

Estimating the magnitude of tropical cyclone (TC) rainfall at different landfalling stages is an important aspect of the TC forecast that directly affects the level of response from emergency managers. In this study, a climatology of the TC rainfall magnitude as a function of the location of the TC centers within distance intervals from the coast and the percentage of the raining area over the land is presented on a global scale. A total of 1834 TCs in the period from 2000 until 2019 are analyzed using satellite information to characterize the precipitation magnitude, volumetric rain, rainfall area, and axial-symmetric properties within the proposed landfalling categories, with an emphasis on the post-landfall stages. We found that TCs experience rainfall maxima in regions adjacent to the coast when more than 50% of their rainfall area is over the water. TC rainfall is also analyzed over the entire TC extent and the portion over land. When the total extent is considered, rainfall intensity, volumetric rain, and rainfall area increase with wind speed intensity. However, once it is quantified over the land only, we found that rainfall intensity exhibits a nearly perfect inversely proportional relation with the increase in TC rainfall area. In addition, when a TC with life maximum intensity of a major hurricane makes landfall as a tropical depression or tropical storm, it usually produces the largest spatial extent and the highest volumetric rain.

Restricted access
Juan Li
,
Haoming Chen
,
Puxi Li
, and
Xingwen Jiang

Abstract

Based on the hourly merged precipitation product, the performance of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) in simulating the diurnal variations of precipitation during warm season over the western periphery of the SCB has been evaluated, and the underlying physical causes associated with the wet biases have also been investigated. The results show that the IFS well reproduces the spatial distributions of precipitation amount, frequency, intensity over the SCB, as well as their diurnal variations, but the simulated precipitation peaks earlier than the observation with notable wet biases over the western periphery of the SCB. In addition, the strong wet biases exhibit notable regional difference over the western periphery of the SCB. The simulated wet biases over the southwestern periphery of the SCB expanding westward to higher altitudes along the windward slope, with the maximum wet biases occurring at night. The westward expansion of the simulated stronger upward motions results in a westward shift of precipitation. However, the simulated precipitation over the northwestern periphery of the SCB have small difference in terms of the location, the overestimated precipitation is associated with the stronger atmospheric instability, resulting from the higher potential temperature and the larger specific humidity near the surface. The findings revealed in this study indicate that the ECMWF forecast shows distinct uncertainties over the different complex terrain, and thus offer a promising way forward for improvements of model physical processes.

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Amy Clement
,
Tiffany Troxler
,
Oaklin Keefe
,
Marybeth Arcodia
,
Mayra Cruz
,
Alyssa Hernandez
,
Diana Moanga
,
Zelalem Adefris
,
Natalia Brown
, and
Susan Jacobson

Abstract

Cities around the world are experiencing the effects of climate change via increasing extreme heat worsened by urbanization. Within cities, there are disparities in extreme heat exposure that are apparent in various surface and remotely-sensed observations, as well as in the health impacts. There are, however, large data gaps in our ability to quantify the heat experienced by people in their daily lives across urban areas. In this paper, we use hyperlocal observations to measure heat around Miami-Dade County. Temperature and humidity measurements were collected at sites throughout the county between 2018-2021 with low-cost sensors. By comparing these hyperlocal observations with a National Weather Service (NWS) site at the Miami International Airport (MIA), we show that maximum temperatures are on average 6°F higher, and maximum heat index values are 11°F higher, at sites in the county than at MIA. These measurements show that many sites frequently record a heat index above the local threshold value for heat advisory. This is in contrast with the fact that few forecast advisories are issued, and there are correspondingly few exceedances of the threshold at MIA. We use these results to motivate a discussion about the issues of this particular threshold for Miami-Dade County. We highlight the need for data that is closer to residents’ lived experience to assess the impacts of heat and help inform local and regional decision-making, particularly where heat exposure may be underappreciated as a potential public health hazard.

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Chuyen Nguyen
,
Jason E. Nachamkin
,
David Sidoti
,
Jacob Gull
,
Adam Bienkowski
,
Rich Bankert
, and
Melinda Surratt

Abstract

Given the diversity of cloud forcing mechanisms, it is difficult to classify and characterize all cloud types through the depth of a specific troposphere. Importantly, different cloud families often coexist even at the same atmospheric level. The Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) is developing machine learning-based cloud forecast models to fuse numerical weather prediction model and satellite data. These models were built for the dual purpose of understanding numericalweather prediction model error trends aswell as improving the accuracy and sensitivity of the forecasts. The framework implements a Unet-Convolutional Neural Network (UNet-CNN) with features extracted from clouds observed by the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES-16) as well as clouds predicted by the Coupled Ocean/Atmosphere Mesoscale Prediction System (COAMPS). The fundamental idea behind this novel framework is the application of UNet-CNN for separate variable sets extracted from GOES-16 and COAMPS to characterize and predict broad families of clouds that share similar physical characteristics. A quantitative assessment and evaluation based on an independent dataset for upper tropospheric (high) clouds suggests that UNet-CNN models capture the complexity and error trends of combined data from GOES-16 and COAMPS, and also improve forecast accuracy and sensitivity for different lead time forecasts (3-12 hours). This paper includes an overview of the machine learning frameworks as well as an illustrative example of their application, a comparative assessment of results for upper tropospheric clouds.

Open access
Aviv Solodoch
,
Roy Barkan
,
Vicky Verma
,
Hezi Gildor
,
Yaron Toledo
,
Pavel Khain
, and
Yoav Levi

Abstract

The East Mediterranean Sea (EMS) circulation has previously been characterized as dominated by gyres, mesoscale eddies, and disjoint boundary currents. We develop nested high-resolution numerical simulations in the EMS to examine the circulation variability with an emphasis on the yet unexplored regional submesoscale currents. Rather than several disjoint currents, a continuous cyclonic boundary current (BC) encircling the Levantine basin is identified in both model solution and altimetry data. This EMS BC advects eddy chains downstream and is identified as a principle source of regional mesoscale and submesoscale current variability. During the seasonal fall to winter mixed layer deepening, energetic submesoscale (O(10 km)) eddies, fronts, and filaments emerge throughout the basin, characterized by O(1) Rossby numbers. A submesoscale time scale range of ≈1–5 days is identified using spatiotemporal analysis of the numerical solutions, and confirmed through mooring data. The submesoscale kinetic energy (KE) wavenumber (k) spectral slope is found to be k −2, shallower than the quasigeostrophic-like ~ k −3 slope diagnosed in summer. The shallowness of the winter spectral slope is shown to be due to divergent subinertial motions, consistent with the Boyd 1992 theoretical model, rather than with the surface quasigeostrophic model. Using a coarse graining approach, we diagnose a seasonal inverse (forward) KE cascade above (below) 30 km scales due to rotational (divergent) motions, and show that these commence after completion of the fall submesosacle energization. We also show that at scales larger than several 100 kms, the spectral density becomes near-constant and a weak forward cascade occurs, from gyre scales to mesoscales.

Restricted access
David C. Fritts
and
Ling Wang

Abstract

A companion paper by Fritts et al. (2023a) reviews evidence for Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI) “tube” and “knot” (T&K) dynamics that appear to be widespread throughout the atmosphere. Here we describe the results of an idealized direct numerical simulation of multi-scale gravity wave dynamics that reveals multiple larger- and smaller-scale KHI T&K events. The results enable assessments of the environments in which these dynamics arise and their competition with concurrent gravity wave breaking in driving turbulence and energy dissipation. A larger-scale event is diagnosed in detail and reveals diverse and intense T&K dynamics driving more intense turbulence than occurs due to gravity wave breaking in the same environment. Smaller-scale events reveal that KHI T&K dynamics readily extend to weaker, smaller-scale, and increasingly viscous shear flows. Our results suggest that KHI T&K dynamics should be widespread, perhaps ubiquitous, wherever superposed gravity waves induce intensifying shear layers, because such layers are virtually always present. A second companion paper (Fritts et al. 2023b) demonstrates that KHI T&K dynamics exhibit elevated turbulence generation and energy dissipation rates extending to smaller Reynolds numbers for relevant KHI scales wherever they arise. These dynamics are suggested to be significant sources of turbulence and mixing throughout the atmosphere that are currently ignored or under-represented in turbulence parameterizations in regional and global models.

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Free access
Brian A. Colle
,
Julia R. Hathaway
,
Elizabeth J. Bojsza
,
Josef M. Moses
,
Shadya J. Sanders
,
Katherine E. Rowan
,
Abigail L. Hils
,
Elizabeth C. Duesterhoeft
,
Saeed Boorboor
,
Arie E. Kaufman
, and
Susan E. Brennan

Abstract

Many factors shape public perceptions of extreme weather risk; understanding these factors is important to encourage preparedness. This article describes a novel workshop designed to encourage individual and community decision making about predicted storm surge flooding. Over 160 U.S. college students participated in this four-hour experience. Distinctive features included: (1) two kinds of visualizations, standard weather forecasting graphics vs. 3D computer graphics visualization; (2) narrative about a fictitious storm, roleplay, and guided discussion of participants’ concerns; and 3) use of an “ethical matrix,” a collective decision-making tool that elicits diverse perspectives based on the lived experiences of diverse stakeholders. Participants experienced a narrative about a hurricane with potential for devastating storm surge flooding on a fictitious coastal college campus. They answered survey questions before, at key points during, and after the narrative, interspersed with forecasts leading to predicted storm landfall. During facilitated breakout groups, participants role-played characters and filled out an ethical matrix. Discussing the matrix encouraged consideration of circumstances impacting evacuation decisions. Participants’ comments suggest several components may have influenced perceptions of personal risk, risks to others, the importance of monitoring weather, and preparing for emergencies. Surprisingly, no differences between the standard forecast graphics vs. the immersive, hyper-local visualizations were detected. Overall, participants’ comments indicate the workshop increased appreciation of others’ evacuation and preparation challenges.

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