Coupled and Stand-Alone Regional Climate Modeling of Intensive Storms in Western Canada

Kai Ernn Gan, Chun Chao Kuo, Thian Yew Gan*, Holger Schüttrumpf, Vijay Singh, Harri Koivusalo

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

A coupled atmospheric-hydrologic system models the complex interactions between the land surface and the atmospheric boundary layer and the water-energy cycle from groundwater across the land surface to the top of the atmosphere. A regional climate model called weather research forecasting (WRF) was coupled with a land-surface scheme (Noah) to simulate intensive storms in Alberta of Canada. Accounting for the land-atmosphere feedback enhances the predictability of the fine-tuned WRF-Noah system. Soil moisture, vegetation, and land-surface temperature influence latent and sensible heat fluxes and modulate both thermal and dynamical characteristics of land and the lower atmosphere. WRF was set up in a two-way, 3-domain nested framework so that the output of the outermost domain (D1) was used to run the 2nd domain (D2), and the output of D2 was used to run the innermost, 3rd domain (D3). By this 2-way nesting, D3 and D2 provide the feedback to their outer domains (D2 and D1), respectively. D3 was set at a 3-km resolution adequate to simulate convective storms. WRF-Noah was forced with climate outputs from global climate models (GCMs) for the baseline period 1980-2005. A regional frequency analysis and a quantile-quantile bias correction method were applied to develop intensity-duration-frequency (IDF) curves using precipitation data simulated by WRF-Noah. The simulated baseline precipitation of central Alberta agrees well with observed data from a 13-rain gauge network of the City of Edmonton. The 5th-generation mesoscale atmospheric model (MM5) of National Center for Atmospheric Research was also set up in a 3-domain, but 1-way nesting configuration. As expected, after bias correction, precipitation simulated by MM5 was less accurate than that simulated by WRF-Noah. For storms of short durations and return periods of more than 25 years, both MM5 driven by special reports on emission scenario climate scenarios of coupled model inter-comparison project (CMIP3) and WRF-Noah driven by representative concentration pathway climate scenarios of CMIP5 projected storm intensities in central Alberta to increase from the base period to the 2050s and to the 2080s.

Original languageEnglish
Article number05022023
Number of pages12
JournalJOURNAL OF HYDROLOGIC ENGINEERING
Volume28
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2023
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Keywords

  • 5th-generation mesoscale atmospheric model (MM5)
  • Alberta
  • Climate change
  • Dynamic downscaling
  • Intensive storms
  • Land-surface scheme (Noah)
  • Regional climate models
  • Stand-alone and coupled modes
  • Weather research and forecasting (WRF)

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