TY - JOUR
T1 - Numerical simulation of topography effects on the 00.7 severe rainfall in Beijing
AU - Zhang, Chaolin
AU - Ji, Chongping
AU - Kuo, Yinghwa
AU - Fan, Shuiyong
AU - Xuan, Chunyi
AU - Chen, Min
PY - 2005/9
Y1 - 2005/9
N2 - In an effort to study the severe rainfall event of 4-5th July 2000 in Beijing (with 24 h accumulated precipitation of 240 mm), we perform numerical simulations to investigate this event using the MM5v3.6 model. The model is initialized with the MM5/WRF 3DVAR analysis, which incorporates the ground-based GPS precipitable water vapor, automatic and conventional meteorological observations in its assimilation step. For 24 h accumulated precipitation forecast, the threat scores are 0.72, 0.76, 0.67 and 0.63, for thresholds of 1, 5, 10, and 20 mm, respectively. Holding other factors unchanged, sensitivity experiments were conducted with different topographic resolutions of 110, 50 and 3.7 km to investigate the topographic effects on precipitation over the Beijing area. In these sensitivity experiments, we attempt to preserve the realistic orographic distribution in the model topography under the condition of keeping the dynamic-thermodynamic consistency of the initial model atmosphere to the extent possible. Results indicate that the unique topographic distribution and variations in the Beijing area play an important role in determining the location, distribution and intensity of heavy precipitation.
AB - In an effort to study the severe rainfall event of 4-5th July 2000 in Beijing (with 24 h accumulated precipitation of 240 mm), we perform numerical simulations to investigate this event using the MM5v3.6 model. The model is initialized with the MM5/WRF 3DVAR analysis, which incorporates the ground-based GPS precipitable water vapor, automatic and conventional meteorological observations in its assimilation step. For 24 h accumulated precipitation forecast, the threat scores are 0.72, 0.76, 0.67 and 0.63, for thresholds of 1, 5, 10, and 20 mm, respectively. Holding other factors unchanged, sensitivity experiments were conducted with different topographic resolutions of 110, 50 and 3.7 km to investigate the topographic effects on precipitation over the Beijing area. In these sensitivity experiments, we attempt to preserve the realistic orographic distribution in the model topography under the condition of keeping the dynamic-thermodynamic consistency of the initial model atmosphere to the extent possible. Results indicate that the unique topographic distribution and variations in the Beijing area play an important role in determining the location, distribution and intensity of heavy precipitation.
KW - 3DVAR
KW - Ground-based GPS
KW - Heavy rainfall
KW - Numerical simulation
KW - Topography
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/25844445903
U2 - 10.1080/10020070512331342970
DO - 10.1080/10020070512331342970
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:25844445903
SN - 1002-0071
VL - 15
SP - 818
EP - 826
JO - Progress in Natural Science: Materials International
JF - Progress in Natural Science: Materials International
IS - 9
ER -