Advancing precipitation prediction using a new-generation storm-resolving model framework – SIMA-MPAS (V1.0): a case study over the western United States

Global climate models (GCMs) have advanced in many ways as computing power has allowed more complexity and finer resolutions. As GCMs reach storm-resolving scales, they need to be able to produce realistic precipitation intensity, duration, and frequency at fine scales with consideration of scale-aware parameterization. This study uses a state-of-the-art storm-resolving GCM with a nonhydrostatic dynamical core - the Model for Prediction Across Scales (MPAS), incorporated in the atmospheric component (Community Atmosphere Model, CAM) of the open-source Community Earth System Model (CESM), within the System for Integrated Modeling of the Atmosphere (SIMA) framework (referred to as SIMA-MPAS). At uniform coarse (here, at 120 km) grid resolution, the SIMA-MPAS configuration is comparable to the standard hydrostatic CESM (with a finite-volume (FV) dynamical core) with reasonable energy and mass conservation on climatological timescales. With the comparable energy and mass balance performance between CAM-FV (workhorse dynamical core) and SIMAMPAS (newly developed dynamical core), it gives confidence in SIMA-MPAS's applications at a finer resolution. To evaluate this, we focus on how the SIMA-MPAS model performs when reaching a storm-resolving scale at 3 km. To do this efficiently, we compose a case study using a SIMAMPAS variable-resolution configuration with a refined mesh of 3 km covering the western USA and 60 km over the rest of the globe. We evaluated the model performance using satellite and station-based gridded observations with comparison to a traditional regional climate model (WRF, the Weather Research and Forecasting model). Our results show realistic representations of precipitation over the refined complex terrains temporally and spatially. Along with much improved near-surface temperature, realistic topography, and land-air interactions, we also demonstrate significantly enhanced snowpack distributions. This work illustrates that the global SIMA-MPAS at storm-resolving resolution can produce much more realistic regional climate variability, finescale features, and extremes to advance both climate and weather studies. This next-generation storm-resolving model could ultimately bridge large-scale forcing constraints and better inform climate impacts and weather predictions across scales.

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Author Huang, Xingying
Gettelman, Andrew
Skamarock, William C.
Lauritzen, Peter Hjort
Curry, Miles
Herrington, Adam
Truesdale, John T.
Duda, Michael
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2022-11-11T00:00:00
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T18:41:50.799259
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:25849
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Huang, Xingying, Gettelman, Andrew, Skamarock, William C., Lauritzen, Peter Hjort, Curry, Miles, Herrington, Adam, Truesdale, John T., Duda, Michael. (2022). Advancing precipitation prediction using a new-generation storm-resolving model framework – SIMA-MPAS (V1.0): a case study over the western United States. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7rf5zv4. Accessed 11 February 2025.

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