8.4 Compatibility of high resolution
terrain with high resolution model grid
Cheng, William Y. Y, Yubao
Liu, Gregory Roux, Linlin Pan, Yuewei
Liu, National Center for Atmospheric
Research, Jae-Young Byon, and Young-Jean Choi, Korea Meteorological Administration
As computing power
increases, mesoscale models are being run at a higher and higher resolution. Naturally, the user wants
to represent the underlying terrain in the mesoscale model as realistically as
possible by matching the terrain resolution to that of the model. However, from
a theoretical standpoint, this may not be the best option. For example, it has
been shown by Skamarock (2004) that the effective
resolution of ARW WRF is 7 Dx. Terrain features of 7 Dx or smaller may impose forcings
on the WRF model that are unphysical, generating noise or instability. One way
to alleviate this problem is to apply smoothing to the terrain. However, there
is a drawback in this procedure. Smoothing decreases the realism of the terrain
and defeats the purpose of running a high resolution
model. In this paper, the flow over complex terrain in the Korean Peninsula
will be examined using WRF-RTFDDA with two identical domains of the same
horizontal extent with horizontal grid spacing of 3 and 9 km. Sensitivity
experiments were conducted with the underlying terrain smoothed using wavelet
transforms by removing the 2 Dx, 4 Dx, and 8 Dx features.
Sensitivity experiments were compared with each other to show how the model
grid spacing and terrain smoothing affected phenomena such as sea/land breeze
and flow around/over mountains. Preliminary results
indicate that although higher resolution represented the mesoscale flow
features much better, the wind speed mean absolute error (MAE) was higher for
some stations for the 3-km grid. Smoothing via wavelet transform reduced in
wind speed MAE in some of these stations. The ultimate goal of this study is
find a balance between smoothing the underlying terrain while maintaining
realism of flow over complex terrain. Additional results will be shown at the
conference.