THE NMC NESTED REGIONAL SPECTRAL MODEL

Citation
Hmh. Juang et M. Kanamitsu, THE NMC NESTED REGIONAL SPECTRAL MODEL, Monthly weather review, 122(1), 1994, pp. 3-26
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
00270644
Volume
122
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
3 - 26
Database
ISI
SICI code
0027-0644(1994)122:1<3:TNNRSM>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
A nested primitive equation regional spectral model is developed. The model consists of two components- a low-resolution global spectral mod el and a high-resolution regional spectral model. The two components h ave identical vertical structure and physical processes. The global mo del component is a low-resolution version of the operational National Meteorological Center (NMC) global spectral model and uses spherical h armonics as horizontal basis functions. The regional spectral model co mponent is a primitive equation model on a stereographic projection an d uses sine-cosine series as horizontal basis functions. The feature o f the regional component is that it predicts deviations from the forec ast of the global model component, first proposed by Hoyer. A semi-imp licit time scheme, time filtering, initialization, and horizontal diff usion are applied to these deviations in the regional domain. Several sensitivity experiments on ''nesting periods,'' lateral boundary treat ments, and different global model base fields were performed. The resu lts indicate that experiments with 3- or 6-h nesting periods had less noise along the lateral boundaries than those with 1-h nesting period. It was also found that blending along the lateral boundaries may not be necessary but that with relaxation the use of T30 or T62 resolution in the global model was sufficient for a regional model with a horizo ntal resolution of 80 km. The model was tested on real-data cases and was shown to have skill comparable to or better than the other NMC ope rational regional models. The cases shown in this paper included a 48- h prediction of an East Coast disturbance and the ''U.S. storm of the century'' in March 1993, all done with a horizontal resolution of 80 k m, and a 5-day forecast of a hurricane track done with a horizontal re solution of 40 km.