6.2      Testing of Grell-Freitas scheme with Hurricane WRF model

 

Biswas, M., K. Newman, National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)/Developmental Testbed Center (DTC), E. Kalina, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)/Earth Systems Research Laboratory (ESRL), and DTC, L. Carson, NCAR and DTC, G. Grell, NOAA/ESRL, E. Grell, L. Bernardet, and J. Frimel, NOAA/ESRL and DTC

 

The Hurricane Weather Research and Forecasting (HWRF) model is a fully coupled atmosphere-ocean model run operationally for all global basins. HWRF is a complex multicomponent system, consisting of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) atmospheric model coupled to the Princeton Ocean Model for Tropical Cyclones (MPIPOM-TC), a sophisticated initialization package including a data assimilation system and a set of postprocessing and vortex tracking tools.

In recent years, the hurricane community has invested a substantial amount of effort to investigate and improve the representation of physical processes in the HWRF model.  The Developmental Testbed Center (DTC) has partnered with the NOAA/NCEP Environmental Modeling Center (EMC) Hurricane Team and physics developers to evaluate innovative HWRF physical parameterizations directed at improving HWRF forecast skill.

DTC is testing HWRF with an updated scale aware Grell-Frietas (GF) cumulus scheme. Preliminary results suggest improvement of track and intensity for the GF scheme compared to scale aware SAS scheme (operational scheme). For this evaluation, retrospective HWRF forecasts for several storms in the Atlantic and Eastern Pacific basins were produced. Assessment will be done through a combination of physical process diagnostics as well as traditional track and intensity verification, including statistical significance.  Additionally, evaluation of large-scale and storm scale fields will be explored to further investigate sensitivities to the GF scheme in HWRF.