Sensitivity of regional climate simulations of the summer 1998 extreme rainfall to convective parameterization schemes

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Abstract

In this paper, a comparison study of three cumulus parameterization schemes (CPSs), Kain-Fritsch2 (KF2), Grell (GR) and Anthes-Kuo (AK), is carried out using the Pennsylvania State University-National Center for Atmospheric Research mesoscale model (i. e., MM5). The performances of three CPSs are examined in simulations of the long-term heavy Meiyu-frontal rainfall events over the middle to lower reaches of the Yangtze River Basin (YRB-ML) during the summer of 1998. The initial and lateral boundary atmosphere conditions are taken from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction/Department of Energy Reanalysis-2 (R-2) data. The experiment with KF2 scheme (EX_KF2) reproduces reasonably well the major rainfall events, especially the heavy rainfall over YRB-ML during the later stage, and the middle and lower troposphere circulation patterns. In contrast, the experiments with both GR and AK schemes (EX_GR and EX_AK) only simulate the heavy rainfall during the first Meiyu rainy phase with weak intensity, and almost miss the rainfall along YRB-ML during the second phase. The analyses show that the location of 500 hPa western Pacific subtropical high during the first rainy phase, the northward advance during the transition period and the retreat during the second rainy phase, observed from the R-2 data, are successfully captured by EX_KF2, compared to the poor performance of EX_GR and EX_AK. A reasonable proportion of the subgrid-scale rainfall and smaller biases of temperature and moisture from lower to middle troposphere in EX_KF2 decide its good rainfall simulations, in contrast with the absolutely high proportions and the cold and dry biases caused by the decreased vertically convective transportation and the weak southwesterly wind in EX_GR and EX_AK. Overall, the three CPSs show substantial intersimulation differences in rainfall as well as in three-dimensional atmospheric structures, and KF2 shows superior performances. The results suggest that the realistic subgrid-scale CPS is still highly required for the high-resolution regional climate models to simulate the heavy rainfall events.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-15
Number of pages15
JournalMeteorology and Atmospheric Physics
Volume114
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2011

Funding

This work was supported by the Knowledge Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Grant KZCX2-YW-Q11-04, the National Science Foundation of China grant 40905049, the China Meteorological Administration for the R&D Special Fund for Public Welfare Industry (meteorology) (Grant No. GYHY200906020), LASG State Key Laboratory Special Fund and the LASG Free Exploration Fund. The computations were performed on the Lenovo DeepComp 1800 Supercomputer in LASG of the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

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