TY - JOUR
T1 - A case study investigating the low summertime cape behavior in the global forecast system
AU - Sun, Xia
AU - Heinzeller, Dominikus
AU - Bernardet, Ligia
AU - Pan, Linlin
AU - Li, Weiwei
AU - Turner, David
AU - Brown, John
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Meteorological society.
PY - 2024/1
Y1 - 2024/1
N2 - Convective available potential energy (CAPE) is an important index for storm forecasting. Recent versions (v15.2 and v16) of the Global Forecast system (GFs) predict lower values of CAPE during summertime in the continental United states than analysis and observation. We conducted an evaluation of the GFs in simulating summertime CAPE using an example from the Unified Forecast system Case study collection to investigate the factors that lead to the low CAPE bias in GFs. specifically, we investigated the surface energy budget, soil properties, and near-surface and upperlevel meteorological fields. Results show that the GFs simulates smaller surface latent heat flux and larger surface sensible heat flux than the observations. This can be attributed to the slightly drier-than-observed soil moisture in the GFs that comes from an offline global land data assimilation system. The lower simulated CAPE in GFs v16 is related to the early drop of surface net radiation with excessive boundary layer cloud after midday when compared with GFs v15.2. A moisture-budget analysis indicates that errors in the large-scale advection of water vapor does not contribute to the dry bias in the GFs at low levels. Common Community Physics Package single-column model (sCM) experiments suggest that with realistic initial vertical profiles, sCM simulations generate a larger CAPE than runs with GFs iC. sCM runs with an active LsM tend to produce smaller CAPE than that with prescribed surface fluxes. Note that the findings are only applicable to this case study. Including more warm-season cases would enhance the generalizability of our findings.
AB - Convective available potential energy (CAPE) is an important index for storm forecasting. Recent versions (v15.2 and v16) of the Global Forecast system (GFs) predict lower values of CAPE during summertime in the continental United states than analysis and observation. We conducted an evaluation of the GFs in simulating summertime CAPE using an example from the Unified Forecast system Case study collection to investigate the factors that lead to the low CAPE bias in GFs. specifically, we investigated the surface energy budget, soil properties, and near-surface and upperlevel meteorological fields. Results show that the GFs simulates smaller surface latent heat flux and larger surface sensible heat flux than the observations. This can be attributed to the slightly drier-than-observed soil moisture in the GFs that comes from an offline global land data assimilation system. The lower simulated CAPE in GFs v16 is related to the early drop of surface net radiation with excessive boundary layer cloud after midday when compared with GFs v15.2. A moisture-budget analysis indicates that errors in the large-scale advection of water vapor does not contribute to the dry bias in the GFs at low levels. Common Community Physics Package single-column model (sCM) experiments suggest that with realistic initial vertical profiles, sCM simulations generate a larger CAPE than runs with GFs iC. sCM runs with an active LsM tend to produce smaller CAPE than that with prescribed surface fluxes. Note that the findings are only applicable to this case study. Including more warm-season cases would enhance the generalizability of our findings.
KW - Atmosphere-land interaction
KW - Boundary conditions
KW - CAPE
KW - Model evaluation/performance
KW - Operational forecasting
KW - Single-column models
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85186485243
U2 - 10.1175/WAF-D-22-0208.1
DO - 10.1175/WAF-D-22-0208.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85186485243
SN - 0882-8156
VL - 39
SP - 3
EP - 17
JO - Weather and Forecasting
JF - Weather and Forecasting
IS - 1
ER -