20 research outputs found

    A High-Resolution Regional Climate Model Physics Ensemble for Northern Sub-Saharan Africa

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    While climate information from General Circulation Models (GCMs) are usually too coarse for climate impact modelers or decision makers from various disciplines (e.g., hydrology, agriculture), Regional Climate Models (RCMs) provide feasible solutions for downscaling GCM output to finer spatiotemporal scales. However, it is well known that the model performance depends largely on the choice of the physical parameterization schemes, but optimal configurations may vary e.g., from region to region. Besides land-surface processes, the most crucial processes to be parameterized in RCMs include radiation (RA), cumulus convection (CU), cloud microphysics (MP), and planetary boundary layer (PBL), partly with complex interactions. Before conducting long-term climate simulations, it is therefore indispensable to identify a suitable combination of physics parameterization schemes for these processes. Using the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) reanalysis product ERA-Interim as lateral boundary conditions, we derived an ensemble of 16 physics parameterization runs for a larger domain in Northern sub-Saharan Africa (NSSA), northwards of the equator, using two different CU-, MP-, PBL-, and RA schemes, respectively, using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model for the period 2006–2010 in a horizontal resolution of approximately 9 km. Based on different evaluation strategies including traditional (Taylor diagram, probability densities) and more innovative validation metrics (ensemble structure-amplitude-location (eSAL) analysis, Copula functions) and by means of different observation data for precipitation (P) and temperature (T), the impact of different physics combinations on the representation skill of P and T has been analyzed and discussed in the context of subsequent impact modeling. With the specific experimental setup, we found that the selection of the CU scheme has resulted in the highest impact with respect to the representation of P and T, followed by the RA parameterization scheme. Both, PBL and MP schemes showed much less impact. We conclude that a multi-facet evaluation can finally lead to better choices about good physics scheme combinations

    Gravity waves excited during a minor sudden stratospheric warming

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    An exceptionally deep upper-air sounding launched from Kiruna airport (67.82 degrees N, 20.33 degrees E) on 30 January 2016 stimulated the current investigation of internal gravity waves excited during a minor sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) in the Arctic winter 2015/16. The analysis of the radiosonde profile revealed large kinetic and potential energies in the upper stratosphere without any simultaneous enhancement of upper tropospheric and lower stratospheric values. Upward-propagating inertia-gravity waves in the upper stratosphere and downward-propagating modes in the lower stratosphere indicated a region of gravity wave generation in the stratosphere. Two-dimensional wavelet analysis was applied to vertical time series of temperature fluctuations in order to determine the vertical propagation direction of the stratospheric gravity waves in 1-hourly high-resolution meteorological analyses and short-term forecasts. The separation of upward- and downward-propagating waves provided further evidence for a stratospheric source of gravity waves. The scale-dependent decomposition of the flow into a balanced component and inertia-gravity waves showed that coherent wave packets preferentially occurred at the inner edge of the Arctic polar vortex where a sub-vortex formed during the minor SSW

    Web Services Composition and Geographic Information

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    In recent years the need to fast access resources, distributed almost everywhere on the planet, found in Web services a suitable solution for rapid and low cost creation and composition of distributed applications. The benefits of this paradigm soon became clear also to the members of the GIS community who saw in this technology an effective way to rapidly share data between distributed and heterogeneous sources and to achieve spatial interoperability. Nevertheless, despite sharing the same philosophy, geospatial services standards and traditional Web services standards are quite different. In fact, although both types of services adopt XML as the underlying language to encode messages, metadata, schema and interfaces, the other core technologies are quite different and this aspect is crucial when trying to use another of the basic characteristics that make Web services such a widespread and adopted solution: the services composition. While this functionality is of interest to both W3C and the geographic community and a quite wide amount of work has been done towards the possibility of combining traditional Web services and geographic services, literature presents solutions where a standardized approach is not yet completely guaranteed, when different services are used in a composite application. This chapter will cover the issues mentioned above and highlight efforts made to try to overcome the corresponding challenges. In particular, it will also refer to a specific side effect of the service composition, related to the management of the large and flexible amount of data returned by a geographic service, which can cause bottlenecks when performance considerations are not taken into account in the design phase
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