representation of convective processes in nwp models (part ii)

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Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II) George H. Bryan NCAR/MMM Presentation at ASP Colloquium, “The Challenge of Convective Forecasting” 13 July 2006

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Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II). George H. Bryan NCAR/MMM Presentation at ASP Colloquium, “The Challenge of Convective Forecasting” 13 July 2006. Outline. Part I: What is a numerical model? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models

(part II)

George H. Bryan

NCAR/MMM

Presentation at ASP Colloquium,

“The Challenge of Convective Forecasting”

13 July 2006

Page 2: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Outline

• Part I: What is a numerical model?

• Part II: What resolution is needed to simulate convection in numerical models?

Page 3: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Part II: What resolution is needed to simulate convection

in numerical models?

• An interesting question.

• What do our commandments say?

Page 4: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

6. Thou shalt use 1 km grid spacing to simulate convection explicitly

7. ….

Commandments (continued)

Page 5: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

6. Thou shalt use 1 km grid spacing to simulate explicitly convection

7. Honor thy elders

8. ….

Commandments (continued)

“There’s no need for grid spacing smaller than 2 km.”

Page 6: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Perspectives on resolution

• Historical Perspective

• Theoretical Perspective

• Pragmatic Perspective

Page 7: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

1 10 100 km

Cumulus ParameterizationResolved Convection

LES PBL Parameterization

Two Stream Radiation3-D Radiation

Model Physics in High Resolution NWP

PhysicsŅNo ManÕs LandÓ

Page 8: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The “1 km standard”

• Often quoted in journal articles, textbooks, at conferences, etc.

• Clearly, there is some veracity to this “rule of thumb”– otherwise, it wouldn’t be so common

• But, where did it come from?

Page 9: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The first cloud models• Steiner (1973)

– Perhaps first 3D simulation of convection = 200 m– Cumulus congestus

• Schlesinger (1975)– Perhaps first 3D simulation of deep convection = 3.2 km– “a rather coarse mesh was used”

• Schlesinger (1978) = 1.8 km

Page 10: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The first cloud models (cont.)• Klemp and Wilhelmson (1978)

– A groundbreaking paper – The KW Model is the grand-daddy of the ARW

Model = 1 km– “… this resolution is admittedly rather coarse”

• Tripoli and Cotton (1980) = 750 m

• Weisman and Klemp (1982) = 2 km– “Finer resolution would be preferable …”

Page 11: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

8. Thou shalt read the Old Testament

9. ….

Commandments (continued)

Page 12: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The first cloud models (cont.)• Klemp and Wilhelmson (1978)

– A groundbreaking paper – The KW Model is the grand-daddy of the ARW

Model = 1 km– “… this resolution is admittedly rather coarse”

• Tripoli and Cotton (1980) = 750 m

• Weisman and Klemp (1982) = 2 km– “Finer resolution would be preferable …”

Page 13: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary of literature review

of O(1 km) was there from the beginning

• Many recognized/suggested that this was too coarse

• In the decades that followed (80s and 90s), increasing computing power was utilized mainly for larger domains and longer integration times

Page 14: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Justification for 1 km

• Not a great deal of justification out there, other than:– The Sixth Commandment– “scientist A used this resolution; thus, I can,

too.”– “It’s all I could afford.”

• However …

Page 15: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Justification for 1 km

• Weisman et al. (1997) performed a large number of simulations, using from 12 km to 1 km– “… 4 km grid spacing may be sufficient to

reproduce … midlatitude type convective systems”

• They identified (correctly) that non-hydrostatic processes cannot be resolved unless 1 km

Page 16: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Weisman, Skamarock, and Klemp, 1997: The Resolution Dependence of Explicitly Modeled

Convective Systems (MWR, pg 527)

~4 km is sufficient to simulate mesoscale convective systems

System-averaged rainwater mixing ratio (qr)weak shear strong shear

higher resolution

“Clearly, the 1-km solution has not converged.”

higher resolution

“…grid resolutions of 500 m or less may be needed to properly resolve the cellular-scale features …”

Page 17: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Looking beyond 1 km

• Only since the middle 90s have people looked below 1 km systematically

• It’s expensive!– Need grids of O(1000 x 1000)– Small time steps

• Droegemeier et al. (1994, 1996, 1997)– Found differences in simulations of

supercells with 100 m

– Turbulent details began to emerge

Page 18: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

from: Droegemeier et al. (1994)

Supercell simulations: rainwater mixing ratio at z = 4 km, t = 1 h

Page 19: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Other recent studies

• Petch and Grey (2001)• Petch et al. (2002)• Adlerman and Droegemeier (2002)• Bryan et al. (2003)• All found that results were not converged

with = 1 km – i.e., results are dependent on grid spacing– But why?– And what are consequences of coarse

resolution?

Page 20: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Δx = Δz = 125 m:

Δ x = 1000 m, Δz = 500 m:

θe, across-line cross sections

with RKW “optimal” shear

Page 21: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

θe, along-line cross sections

with RKW “optimal” shear

Δx = Δz = 125 m:

Δ x = 1000 m, Δz = 500 m:

Page 22: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

along-line cross sections of θe: x=211 km, x=208 km, x=205 km

Page 23: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

125 m:

1000 m:

Rainwater mixing ratio

with “strong” shear

Page 24: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

125 m:

1000 m:

θe, with “strong” shear

Page 25: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

from: Wakimoto et al. (1996)

Page 26: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Perspectives on resolution

• Historical Perspective

• Theoretical Perspective

• Pragmatic Perspective

Page 27: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

How big are convective clouds, anyway?

• Clouds are surprisingly small

• Median updraft diameters are ~2-4 km

• Updrafts of ~10 km are rare, and are usually found in supercells

Page 28: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Type of case Reference Measurement type Characteristic diameter (km)

Tropical oceanic Lucas et al. 1994 in situ 1.4 Š 4.1 Midlatitude continental (Thunderstorm Project)

Lucas et al. 1994 in situ 4 Š 5

Tropical oceanic Igau et al. 1999 in situ 0.5 Š 3.9 Midlatitude continental

Kyle et al. 1976 in situ 1.8 Š 4.6

Supercell Nelson 1983 Doppler radar 5 Š 15 Tropical continental Yuter and Houze

1995 Doppler radar 2 Š 4

Midlatitude continental

Musil et al. 1991 in situ 1.5 Š 15

Results of a thorough literature review

from: Bryan et al. (2006)

Page 29: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Some of my conclusions:

• Clouds are of O(1 km)

• Grid spacing of O(1 km) should marginally resolve convective updrafts

• I think the earliest cloud modelers knew this

Page 30: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The difference between resolution and grid spacing

• Grid spacing () is clear– The distance between grid cells

• Resolution is nebulous– Recall that numerical techniques cannot

properly handle features less than ~6

Page 31: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

from: Durran (1999)

Analytic solution to the advection equation• “E” = exact• “2” = 2nd order centered• “4” = 4th-order centered

Page 32: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

from: Durran (1999)

Analytic solution to the artificial diffusion terms• “2” = 2

• “4” = 4

• “6” = 6

Page 33: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Effective Resolution

• This is a relatively new concept (to some)

• The effective resolution of a numerical model is the minimum scale that is not affected by artificial aspects of the modeling system

• In the ARW Model, this is ~6-8

Page 34: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

from: Skamarock (2004)

Kinetic energy spectra from ARW simulations

Page 35: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Synthesis

• O(1 km) grid spacing is needed to resolve nonhydrostatic processes

• Deep convective clouds are of O(1 km), and some supercells are of O(10 km)

• The ARW Model needs ~6-8 to “resolve” a feature

1 km grid spacing is looking marginal

Page 36: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Scales in turbulent flows

• L is the scale of the large eddies– e.g., a Cu cloud

is the scale of the dissipative eddies– e.g., the cauliflower-like “puffiness”

Page 37: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)
Page 38: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)
Page 39: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Turbulence

• Small-scale turbulence cannot be resolved in numerical models

• Theory is clear (Kolmogorov 1940)

• To resolve all scales in clouds requires ~0.1 mm grid spacing (Corrsin 1961)

• So, what should we do … ?

Page 40: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The filtered Navier-Stokes equations

ui

t

uiu j

x j

1

p

xi

2ui

xix j

Start with:

Apply a filter, rearrange terms

uir

t

uiru j

r

x j

1

pr

xi

2ui

r

xix j

ij

x j

All sub-filter-scale flow is contained in the term (the subgrid turbulent flux)

from Bryan et al. (2003)

Page 41: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Modeling subgrid turbulence

• We have a fairly good idea of how to parameterize for many flows

• HOWEVER … a few rules apply

Page 42: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Scales in turbulent flows

• L is the scale of the large eddies– e.g., a Cu cloud

is the scale of the dissipative eddies– e.g., the cauliflower-like “puffiness”

Page 43: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

E(κ)

κ

Turbulence Kinetic Energy SpectrumTurbulence Kinetic Energy Spectrum

1/L 1/η

Page 44: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The Four Regimes of Numerical Modeling The Four Regimes of Numerical Modeling (Wyngaard, 2004)(Wyngaard, 2004)

sr

1/Δ

MM sr

1/Δ

LES

r

1/Δ

DNS

sr

1/Δ

?

E(κ)

κ

Page 45: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Mean flow

kinetic energy

Turbulent kinetic energy (large eddies)

Internal energy of

fluid (heat)

Corrsin (1960)

“Crude representation of average energy degradation path”

Turbulent kinetic energy (small eddies)

(A Roadmap!)

Page 46: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Mean flow

kinetic energy

Turbulent kinetic energy (large eddies)

Roadmap for LES

Page 47: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Mean flow

kinetic energy

Turbulent kinetic energy (large eddies)

Roadmap for LES

Transfer of kinetic energy to unresolved scales

Page 48: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

LES subgrid model

• Works well if grid spacing () is 10-100 times smaller than the large eddies (L)

• Recall: L~2-4 km– Suggests that needs to be ~20-200 m

• If we want to use LES models … and we do … then of O(100 m) might be necessary

Page 49: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Early cloud modelers knew this

• Klemp and Wilhelmson (1978):– “. . . closure techniques for the subgrid

equations are based on the existence of a grid scale within the inertial subrange and with present resolution [Δx = 1 km] this requirement is not satisfied.”

Page 50: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Mean flow

kinetic energy

Turbulent kinetic energy (large eddies)

A problem: we want to do this ….

Transfer of kinetic energy to unresolved scales

Page 51: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Mean flow

kinetic energy

Turbulent kinetic energy (large eddies)

… but we’re really doing this with 1-4 km grid spacing

Removal of kinetic energy

Page 52: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary of theoretical section

• There is compelling evidence to use grid spacing less than 1 km– if you are interested in cloud-scale

processes

• There is very little evidence in support of grid spacing of ~4 km– unless you are only looking at the

mesoscale processes

Page 53: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Perspectives on resolution

• Historical Perspective

• Theoretical Perspective

• Pragmatic Perspective

Page 54: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Technical aspects

• Obviously, 100 m grid spacing is not accessible to all problems– It requires a great deal of RAM– It takes a long time to run– It generates an obscene amount of output

• We do real-time simulations with 4 km grid spacing because we can– Results are better than using a convective

parameterization

Page 55: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

A new question:

• Given that:– many application are forced to use grid

spacing of 1-4 km …– grid spacing of ~100 m seems to be the

“ideal” choice …

• Then:– what are the implications of using 1-4 km

grid spacing?

Page 56: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

The answer …

• … is coming from a new set of simulations

• Designed carefully, considering:– Numerical techniques– Effective resolution– Bridging the studies by Weisman et al. (1997)

and Bryan et al. (2003)

• Uses Bryan-Fritsch Model (much like ARW)

Page 57: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Overview of Simulations

periodic

periodic

openopen

Domain: 512 km x 128 km x 18 km

Cold pool

• Depth = 2.5 km

• Min. surface = -6 K

Page 58: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Initial Conditions: horizontally homogeneous

CAPE 2700 J/kg: slightly more unstable than Weisman et al. (1997)

Weak shear confined to lowest 2.5 km

Page 59: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Design of simulations (cont.)• Parameterizations:

– Ice microphysics (Lin et al., 1983)– No radiation– No surface fluxes– Subgrid turbulence (TKE, Deardorff 1980)

• Grid spacing:– Δx = 8, 4, 2, 1, 0.5, 0.25, 0.125 km– Δz = 0.25 km

(except: Δz = 0.125 km for Δx = 0.125 km)

Page 60: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

System structure:

Composite reflectivity (dBZ) at t = 5 h

NOTE: better representation of stratiform region

Page 61: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

System structure:

Line-averaged reflectivity (dBZ) and cloud boundary (white contour) at t = 5 h

NOTE: high cloud tops ( > 14 km )

NOTE: better representation of stratiform region

Page 62: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Results: Maximum w (m/s)

Higher resolution

Page 63: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Domain-total upward mass flux (1011 kg/s)

Higher resolution

Page 64: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary of early development

• Compared to higher resolution simulations:– With = 4 km, development is too slow– With = 4 km, systems become too intense

• For the higher resolution simulations:– Possible convergence for < 0.25 km– Remember: we are looking for a resolution-

independent result

Page 65: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

System structure:

Composite reflectivity (dBZ) at t = 5 h

Page 66: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Accumulated precipitation (cm)

(t = 3 - 5 h)

Page 67: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Domain-total accumulated rainfall (t = 3 - 5 h)

Page 68: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary of system structure

• With < 1 km:– Squall line has better stratiform region– Simulations produce less rainfall

• Thus, inadequate resolution may explain the biases we see in real-time forecasts using ARW with 4 km grid spacing

Page 69: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Vertical velocity (w) at z = 5 km, t = 5 h

Page 70: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Vertical velocity (w) at z = 5 km, t = 5 h

Page 71: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Vertical velocity (w) at z = 5 km, t = 5 h

Page 72: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Vertical velocity spectra, z = 5 km, t = 3-5 h

Thick solid: scales above 6 Thin dashed: scales below 6

Page 73: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Vertical velocity spectra, z = 5 km, t = 3-5 h

L = 24 kmfor x = 4 km

L = 4 kmfor x = 0.5, 0.25 km

Thick solid: scales above 6 Thin dashed: scales below 6

Page 74: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary of updraft properties

• Updrafts are poorly resolved when 1 km– Updraft size scales with the model’s diffusive

cutoff– Updraft spacing and size keeps changing as

changes

• Updraft properties converge when 500 m– Updraft spacing is ~4 km– Updraft width is ~2 km

Page 75: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary

Horizontal grid spacing, :

10 km 1 km 0.1 km

Representation of nonhydrostatic processes:

Representation of turbulent processes:

Page 76: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary

Horizontal grid spacing, :

10 km 1 km 0.1 km

Representation of nonhydrostatic processes:

Poor

Representation of turbulent processes:

Poor

Page 77: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary

Horizontal grid spacing, :

10 km 1 km 0.1 km

Representation of nonhydrostatic processes:

Poor Ok

Representation of turbulent processes:

Poor Poor

Page 78: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary

Horizontal grid spacing, :

10 km 1 km 0.1 km

Representation of nonhydrostatic processes:

Poor Ok Good

Representation of turbulent processes:

Poor Poor Ok / Good

Page 79: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

Summary• There are probably systematic biases in

simulations that use 1-4 km grid spacing

• Convection initiation is too slow– Updrafts are too wide– Mass flux will be too large

• Convection is too intense– Strong shear environment might be better

• This might explain some errors in real-time, 4-km simulations over central USA

Page 80: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

1 km vs. 100 m

1 km grid spacing:

• Accurately reproduces mesoscale dynamics

• Provides useful forecast guidance

• More appropriate for high shear cases

100 m grid spacing:

Theoretically more appropriate given current understanding turbulence (terra incognita)

Required for studies of cloud-scale processes (e.g., entrainment)

Page 81: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

My advice

• Grid spacing that you use must be a compromise between:– What is tractable– What is really needed

• 1-4 km grid spacing is good for overall system structure, propagation

• ~100 m should be desired when no observations are available

Page 82: Representation of Convective Processes in NWP Models (part II)

<end of Part II>