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Improving the stable surface layer in the NCEP global forecast system

  • Weizhong Zheng
  • , Michael Ek
  • , Kenneth Mitchell
  • , Helin Wei
  • , Jesse Meng
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • Prescient Weather Ltd.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study examines the performance of the NCEP Global Forecast System (GFS) surface layer parameterization scheme for strongly stable conditions over land in which turbulence is weak or even disappears because of high near-surface atmospheric stability. Cases of both deep snowpack and snow-free conditions are investigated. The results show that decoupling and excessive near-surface cooling may appear in the late afternoon and nighttime, manifesting as a severe cold bias of the 2-m surface air temperature that persists for several hours ormore.Concurrently, because of negligible downward heat transport fromthe atmosphere to the land, a warm temperature bias develops at the first model level. The authors test changes to the stable surface layer scheme that include introduction of a stability parameter constraint that prevents the land-atmosphere system from fully decoupling and modification to the roughness-length formulation. GFS sensitivity runs with these two changes demonstrate the ability of the proposed surface layer changes to reduce the excessive nearsurface cooling in forecasts of 2-m surface air temperature. The proposed changes prevent both the collapse of turbulence in the stable surface layer over land and the possibility of numerical instability resulting fromthermal decoupling between the atmosphere and the surface. The authors also execute and evaluate dailyGFS 7-day test forecasts with the proposed changes spanning a one-month period in winter. The assessment reveals that the systematic deficiencies and substantial errors in GFS near-surface 2-m air temperature forecasts are considerably reduced, along with a notable reduction of temperature errors throughout the lower atmosphere and improvement of forecast skill scores for light and medium precipitation amounts.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3969-3987
Number of pages19
JournalMonthly Weather Review
Volume145
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2017

Keywords

  • Atmosphere-land interaction
  • Land surface model
  • Numerical weather prediction/forecasting
  • Parameterization
  • Surface layer
  • Surface temperature

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