National Repository of Grey Literature 1 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Evaluation of precipitation totals simulated by the ALADIN/PERUN atmospheric reanalysis at high spatial resolution
Bližňák, Vojtěch ; Zacharov, Petr, jr.
Atmospheric reanalyses represent powerful tools for obtaining information about the state of the atmosphere in history, which is obtained by numerical weather prediction (NWP) models whose predictions may (but may not) be improved through the assimilation of measured data. Significant developments in computer technology have recently enabled to increase their spatial resolution so that even meteorological phenomena of a local nature can be better captured. However, most NWP models compensate this capability by reducing the computational domain, which largely limits the use of these forecasts for the following meteorological, climatological and/or hydrological applications. The newly developed ALADIN/PERUN atmospheric reanalysis provides simulations of various meteorological variables at high spatial (2.3 km) and temporal (1 h) resolution over most of Europe between 1989 and 2020. Due to the high resolution of the reanalysed data, it can be expected that precipitation fields will capture local-scale processes well, and thus reproduce more faithfully, for example, heavy convective precipitation. The presented paper aims to evaluate this capability based on gauge-adjusted radar estimates of precipitation totals during warm parts of the year when strong convective but also stratiform precipitation occurs in Central Europe. The accuracy of the localization and precipitation sums will be evaluated for two different runs of the NWP model. The first one (ALADIN/Reanalysis) involves a complete assimilation of the observed data every 6 hours using a 4D-VAR assimilation scheme. The second (ALADIN/Evaluation Run) uses only the boundary conditions from the ERA-5 global reanalysis and the calculation of the forecasts is not further modified based on measured data. Comparing the two runs will provide us with information about the level of physical description in the NWP model as well as the effect of assimilation on the resulting precipitation fields. In addition, the paper is unique in that it will use detailed fields of 'observed' precipitation totals at high spatial resolution, which conventional rain gauge data cannot offer.\n

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.