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Recreating the California New Year's Flood Event of 1997 in a Regionally Refined Earth System Model

  • Alan M. Rhoades
  • , Colin M. Zarzycki
  • , Héctor A. Inda-Diaz
  • , Mohammed Ombadi
  • , Ulysse Pasquier
  • , Abhishekh Srivastava
  • , Benjamin J. Hatchett
  • , Eli Dennis
  • , Anne Heggli
  • , Rachel McCrary
  • , Seth McGinnis
  • , Stefan Rahimi-Esfarjani
  • , Emily Slinskey
  • , Paul A. Ullrich
  • , Michael Wehner
  • , Andrew D. Jones
    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    • Pennsylvania State University
    • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
    • University of California at Davis
    • Desert Research Institute
    • University of California at Los Angeles
    • National Center for Atmospheric Research
    • Lawrence Livermore Natl. Laboratory
    • University of California at Berkeley

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    18 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    The 1997 New Year's flood event was the most costly in California's history. This compound extreme event was driven by a category 5 atmospheric river that led to widespread snowmelt. Extreme precipitation, snowmelt, and saturated soils produced heavy runoff causing widespread inundation in the Sacramento Valley. This study recreates the 1997 flood using the Regionally Refined Mesh capabilities of the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (RRM-E3SM) under prescribed ocean conditions. Understanding the processes causing extreme events informs practical efforts to anticipate and prepare for such events in the future, and also provides a rich context to evaluate model skill in representing extremes. Three California-focused RRM grids, with horizontal resolution refinement of 14 km down to 3.5 km, and six forecast lead times, 28 December 1996 at 00Z through 30 December 1996 at 12Z, are assessed for their ability to recreate the 1997 flood. Planetary to synoptic scale atmospheric circulations and integrated vapor transport are weakly influenced by horizontal resolution refinement over California. Topography and mesoscale circulations, such as the Sierra barrier jet, are better represented at finer horizontal resolutions resulting in better estimates of storm total precipitation and storm duration snowpack changes. Traditional time-series and causal analysis frameworks are used to examine runoff sensitivities state-wide and above major reservoirs. These frameworks show that horizontal resolution plays a more prominent role in shaping reservoir inflows, namely the magnitude and time-series shape, than forecast lead time, 2-to-4 days prior to the 1997 flood onset.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere2023MS003793
    JournalJournal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
    Volume15
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Oct 2023

    Keywords

    • Earth system model
    • extremes
    • flood
    • hydrometeorology
    • rain-on-snow
    • regionally refined mesh

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