AbstractsPsychology

Assessing The Skill Of Next Day Convection Allowing Model Forecasts Of Convection Initiating On Outflow Boundaries

by Robert Hepper




Institution: Creighton University
Department:
Year: 2015
Record ID: 2058602
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10504/68745


Abstract

Residual outflow boundaries from previous convection often serve as a forcing mechanism for new convective development and can serve to locally enhance severe weather potential. Accurate representation of the location of these boundaries in high-resolution numerical weather prediction guidance is crucial for operational forecasters tasked with making convective forecasts. This study evaluates next day forecasts from 4 different convection-allowing configurations of the Weather Research and Forecast Model (WRF) in cases in which convection initiated on a residual outflow boundary. Forecasts from the National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) 4 km WRF, the National Center for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) Hires Window 4 km WRF-Advanced Research WRF (ARW) and 4 km WRF-Nonhydrostatic Mesoscale Model (NMM) and the NCEP Experimental 4 km WRF-NMM for SPC are evaluated over 54 such cases from the convective seasons of 2011-2013. Objective verification techniques are employed comparing model 12 hour precipitation forecasts to NCEP Stage IV hourly precipitation analyses. Results indicate that convection allowing guidance underperforms overall in outflow boundary cases. Performance is found to be especially poor in weakly forced cases. The implications for the operational forecaster are discussed.