对科罗拉多州山区冬季降水量估计和预测的评估

J. Bytheway, W. Currier, Mimi Hughes, Kelly Mahoney, Rob Cifelli
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摘要

冬季降水给观测和预报带来了许多挑战,尤其是在美国西部复杂的地形中,雷达波束的阻挡和现场观测的困难导致观测数据比美国东部更为稀少。众所周知,美国西部冬季降水的不确定性很高,以至于一些研究发现,在气候异常年份,模型模拟降水产生的大尺度年降水量估计值与网格观测产品相似或更好。本研究评估了科罗拉多落基山脉的多雷达多传感器(MRMS)和第四阶段的高分辨率网格降水估算值,以及 NOAA 高分辨率快速刷新(HRRR)模式的预测值。将网格降水估计值和预测值与 SNOTEL 对两季冬季降水的实地测量结果进行了比较。研究了预报长度、准备时间和模式海拔对 HRRR 季节性降水预测的影响。此外,还与 "降水、低层大气和地表水文气象研究(SPLASH)"活动期间在科罗拉多州东河流域部署的相对密集的观测网络进行了比较。与现场和飞机测量结果相比,网格产品和预报低估了 25-65% 的冷季降水量,较长预报期和准备时间(6-24 小时)的偏差(25-30%)小于较短预报期和准备时间的偏差(55-65%)。对多年观测数据的评估表明,这些偏差与创建网格产品和预报所使用的数据和方法有关,而与降水特征无关。
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Evaluation of wintertime precipitation estimates and forecasts in the mountains of Colorado
Wintertime precipitation poses many observational and forecasting challenges, especially in the complex topography of the western US where radar beam blockage and difficulty siting in situ observations yields more sparse observations than in the eastern US. Uncertainty in western US winter precipitation is known to be high, so much so that some studies have found model simulated precipitation to produce similar or better large-scale estimates of annual precipitation than gridded observational products during climatologically anomalous years. This study evaluates high-resolution gridded precipitation estimates from Multi-Radar Multi-Sensor (MRMS) and Stage IV as well as forecasts from NOAA’s High-Resolution Rapid Refresh (HRRR) model in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. Gridded precipitation estimates and forecasts are compared to in situ SNOTEL measurements for two seasons of wintertime precipitation. The influence of forecast length, lead time, and model elevation on seasonal precipitation predictions from the HRRR are investigated. Additional comparisons are made to the relatively dense network of observations deployed in Colorado’s East River Watershed during the Study of Precipitation, the Lower Atmosphere and Surface for Hydrometeorology (SPLASH) campaign. Gridded products and forecasts are found to underestimate cold season precipitation by 25–65% compared to in situ and aircraft measurements, with longer forecast periods and lead times (6–24 h) having smaller biases (25–30%) than shorter forecast periods and lead times (55–65%). The assessment of multiple years of observations indicates that these biases are related more to the data and methods used to create the gridded products and forecasts than to precipitation characteristics.
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