Abstract

Soil moisture is a critical parameter in numerical weather prediction (NWP) models because it plays a fundamental role in the exchange of water and energy cycles between the atmosphere and the land surface through evaporation. To improve the forecast skills of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model in Xinjiang, China, this study investigated the impacts of soil moisture initialization on the WRF forecasts by performing a series of simulations. A group of simulations was conducted using the single-column model (SCM) from 1200 UTC on 15 to 18 August 2019, at Urumchi, Xinjiang (43.78° N, 87.6° E); another was performed using the WRF model for a real weather case in Xinjiang from 0000 UTC 15 August to 1200 UTC 18 August 2019, which included an episode of heavy precipitation and gales. Our most notable findings are as follows. Specific humidity increases and potential temperature decreases persistently when soil moisture increases because of soil water evaporation. Soil moisture initialization could impact the energy budget and modulate the partition of the total available energy at the land surface significantly through evaporation and the greenhouse effect. Replacing the soil moisture with a proper multiple of the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) Global Forecast System (GFS) soil moisture data could significantly improve the critical success index (CSI) and frequency bias (FBIAS) of precipitation and the root-mean-squared errors (RMSEs) of 2-m specific humidity and 2-m temperature. These findings indicate the prospect of a new way to improve the forecast skills of WRF in Xinjiang or other similar regions.

Highlights

  • Soil moisture affects the planetary boundary layer’s (PBL) evolution through evaporation and sensible heat fluxes

  • critical success index (CSI) and frequency bias (FBIAS) improved significantly when the soil moisture content was set to an appropriate multiple of

  • We rigorously investigated the impacts of soil moisture initialization on the forecasts the Global Forecast System (GFS) soil moisture content across all simulation regions

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Summary

Introduction

Soil moisture affects the planetary boundary layer’s (PBL) evolution through evaporation and sensible heat fluxes. This results in differences in the mesoscale vertical circulation [1,2]. A higher soil moisture typically causes lower soil and air temperatures, more stable and shallower boundary layers (BL) and higher humidity and moist static energy in the BL. This leads to a lower cumulus cloud base and higher convective available potential energy [3]. It plays some important roles in numerical weather prediction (NWP) models

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