报告开始:2021年07月10日 16:30 (Asia/Shanghai)
报告时间:15min
所在会议:[S11B] 11B、大气科学 » [S11B-1] 11B、专题2-数值模式与资料同化
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Although numerous studies have demonstrated that increasing model spatial resolution in free forecasts can
potentially improve tropical cyclone (TC) intensity forecasts, studies on the impact of model resolution during data assimilation
(DA) on TC prediction are lacking. In this study, using the ensemble-variational DA system for the Hurricane
Weather Research and Forecasting (HWRF) Model, we investigated the individual impact of increasing the model resolution
of first guess (FG) and background ensemble (BE) forecasts during DA on initial analyses and subsequent forecasts
of Hurricane Patricia (2015). The impacts were compared between horizontal and vertical resolutions and also between the
tropical storm (TS) and hurricane assimilation during Patricia. The results show that increasing the horizontal or vertical
resolution in FG has a larger impact than increasing the resolution in BE on improving the analyzed TC intensity and
structure for the hurricane stage. The result is reversed for the TS stage. These results are attributed to the effectiveness of
increasing the FG resolution in intensifying the background vortex for the hurricane stage relative to the TS stage.
Increasing the BE resolution contributes to improving the analyzed intensity through the better-resolved background
correlation structure for both the hurricane and TS stages. Increasing horizontal resolution has an overall larger effect than
increasing vertical resolution in improving the analysis at the hurricane stage and their effects are close for the analysis at the
TS stage. Additionally, the more accurately analyzed primary circulation, secondary circulation, and warm-core structures
via the increased resolution in DA lead to improved TC intensity forecasts.
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