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Using Fractional Lake Ice and Variable Ice Thickness in the WRF-ARW to improve Great Lakes Forecasting Michael Dutter and Todd Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette, MI 2014 Great Lakes Operational Meteorology Workshop – Ann Arbor, MI

Michael Dutter and Todd Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette, MI

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Using Fractional Lake Ice and Variable Ice Thickness in the WRF-ARW to improve Great Lakes Forecasting. Michael Dutter and Todd Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette, MI 2014 Great Lakes Operational Meteorology Workshop – Ann Arbor, MI. Motivation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Using Fractional Lake Ice and Variable Ice Thickness in the WRF-ARW to improve Great

Lakes Forecasting

Michael Dutter and Todd KluberNOAA/National Weather Service Marquette, MI

2014 Great Lakes Operational Meteorology Workshop – Ann Arbor, MI

Page 2: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

• Despite Lake Superior being completely (or nearly completely) ice covered for much of Feb-April 2014, lake effect bands were still occasionally observed. Some of these proved to be relatively significant.

• Various NWP (as well as local forecasters) struggled to identify when/where LES would occur, especially during changing ice cover or when the lake surface was not fully ice covered.

Motivation

Page 3: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Main Goal of Research

• Preliminary look at whether improved ice cover analysis/initialization will improve upon NWP forecasts of lake effect processes (especially precipitation) by:1. Using ice concentration, coverage and thickness

analyses from GLERL Nowcast as primary inputs into a local WRF-ARW for the Upper Great Lakes

2. Leveraging PolarWRF modifications (fractional ice and variable ice thickness parameters) within the WRF-ARW

Page 4: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Discussion Points

• Operational NWP sea ice implementation• Background Research– Laird and Kristovich – Studied LES Morphology– Gerbush et al. – Heat Flux Variations on Lake Erie– Hines et al. – Polar enhancements for the WRF

(Polar WRF)• Methodology/Modeling• Case Studies

Page 5: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Ice In Operational NWP

• NAM and RAP uses a binary ice coverage (0 or 1) Any ice coverage >= 50% is assigned 1.– Fixed ice thickness of 1 m (split into 4 equal .25m

slabs) for flux calculations• The GFS uses fractional sea ice, however the

course horizontal resolution in the Great Lakes limits the effectiveness.– Variable ice thickness for flux calculations

• GEM also uses fractional ice.– Variable ice thickness for flux calculations

Page 6: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Ice in Operational NWP(5/2/2014)

GLERL Analysis NAM

GFS GEM

Page 7: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Laird and Kristovich (2004)

• Modeled numerous cases across the Great Lakes to resolve LES mesoscale morphology

• Noted ice cover was present during many LES events, and that some events saw ice concentrations over 80% across the entire lake.– Two cases in Lake Erie had 95% ice coverage

• Their study showed that accounting for ice cover in their model only led to a small improvement in hindcast accuracy of LES events.– However, it was noted that different concentrations of lake

ice cover remains an important yet unknown challenge when forecasting lake effect processes (heat fluxes, etc).

Page 8: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Gerbush et al. (2008)

• Conducted aerial study of Heat Flux variations over Pack Ice-Covered Lake Erie during the Great Lakes Ice Cover Atmospheric Flux (GLICAF) experiment

• Found that sensible heat fluxes decreased nonlinearly with increasing ice concentrations– In fact, the majority of SHF decreases occurred

with ice concentrations greater than 70%• Latent heat fluxes displayed a more linear

decrease with increase ice concentrations

Page 9: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Gerbush et al. (2008) SHF and LHF regressions

Sensible HF Latent HF

Page 10: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Granite Island Flux Data Feb 2014 (Data courtesy Dr. John Lenters and NMU)

Page 11: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Polar WRF (Hines et al. 2014)

• Developed by the Polar Meteorology Group at Ohio State mainly for sea ice over the polar regions (Hines and Bromwich 2008)

• Implements fractional sea ice, variable sea ice thickness and snow depth in WRF (specifically the Noah LSM)

• Not a great deal of information (if any) found on using these enhancements on the Great Lakes.– Obviously 2014 was an excellent year for initial

testing

Page 12: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Fractional Ice in PolarWRF

When fractional sea ice is turned on surface layer routines are called twice:• Open water• Ice CoverThe resulting values are then averaged, then weighted by the sea ice fraction.

Problem is at least over the Great Lakes, it has been noted that most of the reduction of sensible fluxes occur when ice cover is more than 70% (Gerbush et al 2008).

Page 13: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Ice Thickness in WRF• Heat flux depends on the depth of snow/ice

which heat flows. In the Noah LSM, this term is inversely proportional to the sum of half the thickness of the upper ice layer(Hines et al. 2014)

As expected, heat fluxes increase with decrease of ice thickness

Page 14: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Modeling Experiment Details

• WRF 5.3.1 with PolarWRF modifications

• ARW Core• 5km horizontal resolution/40

vertical levels• Explicit Convection• WRF Single Moment MP• Explicit Cumulus Parameterization• RRTM LW Radiation• Dudhia SW Radiation• NOAH Land Surface

Page 15: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Case Study Runs

1. Control – No Ice (noice)2. GLERL Ice (0 or 1 Ice Concentration (>70%) and 0.3

m Thickness) (binice)3. GLERL Ice (Fractional Ice) (fractice)4. GLERL Ice (Fractional Ice and Variable Thickness)5. Full Ice

Each run used the NAM as Initial and Boundary Conditions, using the run valid time of 12 hours before the “height” of the event. SST input are from GLERL.

Page 16: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Case Studies

• Feb 23-24, 2014 – Whitefish Point into areas of Ontario NW of Sault Ste. Marie

• Mar 12, 2014 – Duluth, MN Area

Page 17: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Feb 23 2014

• Heavy snow close to Whitefish Point, MI– 11 inches at the

Paradise observing site

• An west-east band of very persistent LES snow developed in an area of lower concentrated ice

11

Page 18: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Feb 23 2014 – Radar (WGJ)

2/23/2014 – 00z 2/24/2014 – 06z

Page 19: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Feb 23 2014 – Ice Cover

Ice Thickness (cm) - GLERL

Ice Concentration – GLERLIce concentrations were generally 90+ percent across all of Lake Superior, except the extreme SE where concentrations were as low as 20 percent. Thickness was in 15-30cm range.

NIC Analysis

Page 20: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Feb 23 2014 – 15Z

fractice_0.3m fractice_0.1m

Note how there is very little difference in reflectivity structure

Page 21: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Feb 23 2014 – 15Zbinice_0.3m

fractice_0.3mnoice

Page 22: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Feb 23 2014 – 18Zbinice_0.3m

fractice_0.3mnoice

Page 23: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Feb 24 2014 – 03Zbinice_0.3m

fractice_0.3mnoice

Page 24: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Granite Island Flux Data Feb 23 2014 (Data courtesy Dr. John Lenters and NMU)

Note that at Granite Island despite the analysis showing 90% ice cover, there are still plenty of open areas, thus 6 hr mean fluxes are higher than the fractice model run.

Page 25: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Mar 12 2014 – Duluth Area• Band of heavy snow extended NE-SW into areas

between Duluth and Two Harbors, MN• Most of this snow fell in the early morning hours

of Mar 12

Page 26: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Mar 12 2014 - Radar

02z Mar 12 2014 15z Mar 12 2014

Page 27: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Mar 12 2014 – Ice Cover

Note the open ice just off of Duluth and NW Wisconsin.Ice Thickness is 10-25 cm across much of the lake

Ice Thickness (cm) - GLERL

Ice Concentration – GLERL

Page 28: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Mar 12 2014 – 06Zbinice_0.3m

fractice_0.3mnoice

Page 29: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Mar 12 2014 – 11Zbinice_0.3m

fractice_0.3mnoice

Page 30: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

Preliminary Observations

• Current operational NWP can be improved on with regards to ice analysis and forecasting of fluxes with ice cover– Incorporate findings from Gerbush et al (2008)

• Importance of an accurate ice analysis (even if it is a simple yes/no answer for coverage) is critical in improving fluxes and identifying where LES bands may occur.– Ingest GLERL ice analysis/nowcasts into local real time runs.– Fractional ice may even hurt the forecast at times

• Ice thickness may help, but is perhaps not the most critical factor, at least with regards to forecasting placement/intensity of LES bands

• If even a small part of the lake was open, the LES bands behaved more like the entire lake was open.– Local real time “no ice” runs through the winter (for worst case)??

• Need to investigate more subtle cases and look closer at fluxes at Granite Island.

Page 31: Michael  Dutter  and Todd  Kluber NOAA/National Weather Service Marquette,  MI

THANK YOU!QUESTIONS?

[email protected]