在飓风分析和预报系统中耦合动态海洋的影响

IF 2 3区 地球科学 Q3 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Lewis J. Gramer, John Steffen, Maria Aristizabal Vargas, Hyun-Sook Kim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

将三维海洋环流模式与大气模式耦合可以显著改善热带气旋(TC)的预报。这尤其适用于对热带气旋强度(最大持续表面风和最小中心气压)以及结构(如表面风场大小)的预测。本研究试图利用一个实用的热气旋模式,探索动态海洋影响热气旋演变的物理机制。作者评估了海洋耦合对 NOAA 的飓风分析和预报系统 v1.0 B(HFSB)中的 TC 强度和结构预报的影响,该系统于 2023 年在 NOAA 国家气象局投入运行。该研究将现有的 HFSB 耦合模拟与使用相同模式配置的模拟进行了比较,其中动态海洋耦合被一个简单的日变化海面温度模式所取代。作者分析了 2020-2022 年大西洋飓风季节的相关热带气旋,选择了耦合路径-预报误差较小的预报周期进行详细分析。结果表明,海洋对热带气旋的动态耦合响应与热带气旋的结构变化之间存在联系,而结构变化与强度和表面风场大小的变化直接相关。这些结果表明了耦合在预报移动速度较慢的热带气旋和表面风场较大的热带气旋中的重要性。然而,在一些意想不到的情况下,耦合会影响近热带气旋的大气环境(如中层水汽入侵),最终影响强度预报。这些结果表明,即使对于移动更快、规模更小的热气旋,海洋对近热气旋大气环境风场的响应对热气旋预报的影响也很重要。作者还研究了耦合会降低预报性能的情况。耦合与非耦合 HFSB 的统计比较进一步显示了一个有趣的趋势:非耦合预报的峰值表面风偏高,而耦合预报的偏差相应较低,与预期相反;耦合预报的 34 kt 风半径相对于国家飓风中心的最佳路径估计值也显示了显著的负偏差。相比之下,耦合预报的最低中心气压偏差很小,而非耦合预报的最低中心气压偏差很大。本文讨论了这些差异的可能原因。这项工作的最终目标是在今后的工作中更好地评估和改进热带气旋模式的预报。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of coupling a dynamic ocean in the Hurricane Analysis and Forecast System
Coupling a three-dimensional ocean circulation model to an atmospheric model can significantly improve forecasting of tropical cyclones (TCs). This is particularly true of forecasts for TC intensity (maximum sustained surface wind and minimum central pressure), but also for structure (e.g., surface wind-field sizes). This study seeks to explore the physical mechanisms by which a dynamic ocean influences TC evolution, using an operational TC model. The authors evaluated impacts of ocean-coupling on TC intensity and structure forecasts from NOAA’s Hurricane Analysis and Forecast System v1.0 B (HFSB), which became operational at the NOAA National Weather Service in 2023. The study compared existing HFSB coupled simulations with simulations using an identical model configuration in which the dynamic ocean coupling was replaced by a simple diurnally varying sea surface temperature model. The authors analyzed TCs of interest from the 2020–2022 Atlantic hurricane seasons, selecting forecast cycles with small coupled track-forecast errors for detailed analysis. The results show the link between the dynamic, coupled ocean response to TCs and coincident TC structural changes directly related to changing intensity and surface wind-field size. These results show the importance of coupling in forecasting slower-moving TCs and those with larger surface wind fields. However, there are unexpected instances where coupling impacts the near-TC atmospheric environment (e.g., mid-level moisture intrusion), ultimately affecting intensity forecasts. These results suggest that, even for more rapidly moving and smaller TCs, the influence of the ocean response to the wind field in the near-TC atmospheric environment is important for TC forecasting. The authors also examined cases where coupling degrades forecast performance. Statistical comparisons of coupled versus uncoupled HFSB further show an interesting tendency: high biases in peak surface winds for the uncoupled forecasts contrast with corresponding low biases, contrary to expectations, in coupled forecasts; the coupled forecasts also show a significant negative bias in the radii of 34 kt winds relative to National Hurricane Center best track estimates. By contrast, coupled forecasts show very small bias in minimum central pressure compared with a strong negative bias in uncoupled. Possible explanations for these discrepancies are discussed. The ultimate goal of this work will be to enable better evaluation and forecast improvement of TC models in future work.
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Earth Science
Frontiers in Earth Science Earth and Planetary Sciences-General Earth and Planetary Sciences
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
2076
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Earth Science is an open-access journal that aims to bring together and publish on a single platform the best research dedicated to our planet. This platform hosts the rapidly growing and continuously expanding domains in Earth Science, involving the lithosphere (including the geosciences spectrum), the hydrosphere (including marine geosciences and hydrology, complementing the existing Frontiers journal on Marine Science) and the atmosphere (including meteorology and climatology). As such, Frontiers in Earth Science focuses on the countless processes operating within and among the major spheres constituting our planet. In turn, the understanding of these processes provides the theoretical background to better use the available resources and to face the major environmental challenges (including earthquakes, tsunamis, eruptions, floods, landslides, climate changes, extreme meteorological events): this is where interdependent processes meet, requiring a holistic view to better live on and with our planet. The journal welcomes outstanding contributions in any domain of Earth Science. The open-access model developed by Frontiers offers a fast, efficient, timely and dynamic alternative to traditional publication formats. The journal has 20 specialty sections at the first tier, each acting as an independent journal with a full editorial board. The traditional peer-review process is adapted to guarantee fairness and efficiency using a thorough paperless process, with real-time author-reviewer-editor interactions, collaborative reviewer mandates to maximize quality, and reviewer disclosure after article acceptance. While maintaining a rigorous peer-review, this system allows for a process whereby accepted articles are published online on average 90 days after submission. General Commentary articles as well as Book Reviews in Frontiers in Earth Science are only accepted upon invitation.
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