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Experiments with the Mesoscale Atmospheric Simulation System (MASS) using the synthetic relative humidityThis study is intended to examine the impact of the synthetic relative humidity on the model simulation of mesoscale convective storm environment. The synthetic relative humidity is derived from the National Weather Services surface observations, and non-conventional sources including aircraft, radar, and satellite observations. The latter sources provide the mesoscale data of very high spatial and temporal resolution. The synthetic humidity data is used to complement the National Weather Services rawinsonde observations. It is believed that a realistic representation of initial moisture field in a mesoscale model is critical for the model simulation of thunderstorm development, and the formation of non-convective clouds as well as their effects on the surface energy budget. The impact will be investigated based on a real-data case study using the mesoscale atmospheric simulation system developed by Mesoscale Environmental Simulations Operations, Inc. The mesoscale atmospheric simulation system consists of objective analysis and initialization codes, and the coarse-mesh and fine-mesh dynamic prediction models. Both models are a three dimensional, primitive equation model containing the essential moist physics for simulating and forecasting mesoscale convective processes in the atmosphere. The modeling system is currently implemented at the Applied Meteorology Unit, Kennedy Space Center. Two procedures involving the synthetic relative humidity to define the model initial moisture fields are considered. It is proposed to perform several short-range (approximately 6 hours) comparative coarse-mesh simulation experiments with and without the synthetic data. They are aimed at revealing the model sensitivities should allow us both to refine the specification of the observational requirements, and to develop more accurate and efficient objective analysis schemes. The goal is to advance the MASS (Mesoscal Atmospheric Simulation System) modeling expertise so that the model output can provide reliable guidance for thunderstorm forecasting.
Document ID
19950011757
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Chang, Chia-Bo
(Texas Technological Univ. Lubbock, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 1994
Publication Information
Publication: Univ. of Central Florida, NASA(ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program. 1994 Research Reports
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Accession Number
95N18172
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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