NOUS41
KWBC 171804 AAA
PNSWSH
Technical
Implementation Notice 11-16, Amended
National
Weather Service Headquarters Washington DC
203 PM EDT Fri Jun 17 2011
To:
Subscribers:
-Family of Services
-NOAA Weather Wire Service
-Emergency Managers Weather Information Network
-NOAAPORT
Other NWS Partners, Users and Employees
From:
Tim McClung
Chief, Science Plans Branch
Office of Science and Technology
Subject:
Amended: Changes to the North American Mesoscale (NAM)
Analysis and Forecast System: Rescheduled for No
Sooner than July 26, 2011
Amended to postpone the implementation until July 26,
2011. This allows time for full testing and integration
work for this upgrade. We will issue
another TIN if the implementation is rescheduled for a date later than July
26. Also amended to
mention in the Output Product Changes section that the precision of accumulated
precipitation output will be standardized across all forecast projections with
this upgrade.
Effective
Tuesday, July 26, 2011, beginning with the 1200 Coordinated Universal Time
(UTC) run, the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) will modify
the North American Mesoscale (NAM) Analysis and Forecast System.
These
changes include:
-Introducing
a new modeling framework
-Installing
a major upgrade to the prediction model
-Modifying
the data analysis and assimilation system
-Adding
to existing NAM products
-Adding
new higher-resolution nests within the NAM including a
very high-resolution
but small domain to support fire weather
and Incident
Meteorologist (IMET) interests.
Details
on the various changes are provided below, along with a notice about possible changes to product generation time.
Model
Upgrades:
NCEP
will introduce the use of the new NOAA Environmental Modeling System (NEMS),
which is based on the tenets put forth by the Earth System Modeling Framework
to which NOAA has subscribed. Eventually all of NCEP’s major modeling will be
performed within NEMS. This NAM upgrade represents the first implementation of
NEMS and a major step in the evolution of NCEP’s modeling suite.
The
prediction model used in the NAM run will go from being the strictly regional
Nonhydrostatic Mesoscale Model (NMM) to a new extended capability version now
known as Nonhydrostatic Multiscale Model on B-grid (NMMB), which can be run
either regionally or globally, and with or without embedded nests. This
NEMS-NMMB will also serve as the prediction model running in the NAM Data
Assimilation System (NDAS). Model changes/ enhancements in the NEMS-NMMB will
include:
a)
Native horizontal grid is an Arakawa staggered B-grid
(rotated 45 deg from the Arakawa
E-grid in the WRF-NMM NAM)
b) New
more conservative Eulerian advection scheme for passive
tracers like water vapor condensate fields
c)
Generalized vertical coordinate
d)
Modified vertical level distribution with more layers in the
stratosphere (14 layers above 200 mb instead of 7 in the
current operational NAM)
e)
Boundary condition treatment changed to specify 5 boundary
rows instead of one
f)
Microphysics changes to produce higher peak reflectivities
above 45 dBZ with higher peak surface rainfall rates in the
high-resolution nests and more realistic grid-scale cloud
fractions from cold, high cirru.
g)
Change from USGS to MODIS_IGBP land-use definitions
h)
Enhanced diffusion for specific humidity and cloud water
i) Run
5 high-resolution nested domains inside the 12km NAM
every cycle. These nests will run with greatly reduced
convective triggering, which improved quantitative
precipitation forecast (QPF) bias compared to using explicit
convection.
All
model changes will also be applied to the Downscaled GFS by NAM Extension
(DGEX) forecast system.
NDAS
Changes:
a)
Initial first guess at T-12hr will reflect relocation of
tropical cyclones
b)
Will use 1/12 degree high resolution real-time sea surface
temperature (RTG_SST_HR) analysis instead of the 1/2th
degree
real-time SST analysis.
c)
Will update 2 m temperature and moisture and 10 m wind with
portion of first layer correction
Changes
to the Gridscale Statistical Interpolation (GSI) analysis:
a) New
faster version of the GSI code with new observation error
estimates, retuned background error covariances for NMMB and
upgraded radiative transfer (CRTM v2.0.2)
b)
Assimilation of new observations: ACARS humidity, Windsat and
ASCAT
(superob'ed Scatterometer winds over
oceans), HIRS
radiances from
NOAA-19, AMSU-A radiances from NOAA-19 and
AQUA,
IASI radiances from METOP, GPS radio occultation
refractivity (COSMIC), RASS virtual temperatures, MAP
(boundary layer profiler) winds and MESONET surface
pressure/temperature/ humidity (winds already included)
c) Use
dynamic reject list for surface mesonet data from the
NCEP
Real-time Mesoscale Analysis (RTMA)
Changes
to the NAM post-processing code:
a) The
height and wind speed at the maximum wind level will be
computed by assuming the wind speed varies quadratically in
height in the neighborhood of the maximum wind level with
the
search being capped at 100mb. The previous algorithm defines
maximum wind level as the level with the maximum wind speed
among all the model
levels.
b) The
static Tropopause level
will be obtained by finding the
lowest level that has a temperature lapse rate of less than
2
K/km over a 2km depth above it. If no such level is
found
below 50 mb, the Tropopause is set to 50 mb. The previous
algorithm defines
the Tropopause by finding
the lowest level
that has mean
temperature lapse rate of 2 K/Km over three
model layers.
c) All
Convective Available Potential Energy (CAPE), Convective
Inhibition (CIN), and
Lifted Index (LI) variables in the NAM
output will be computed using virtual temperature instead of
sensible temperature. See the NWS Public Information
Statement issued January 12, 2011 for more
details on
this change.
Users
should be aware that this NAM upgrade will impact all downstream models and
systems that use the NAM or NDAS as input.
Output
Product Changes:
New
NAM Nest runs, including placeable Fire Weather Nest:
Five
new high-resolution nested domains will run inside the
a)
CONUS (4 km resolution, 0-60 h)
b)
Alaska (6 km resolution, 0-60 h)
c)
Hawaii and Puerto Rico (both 3 km resolution, 0-60 h)
d) Placeable nest will run to 36-h
inside either the CONUS nest
(at 1.33 km resolution) or Alaska nest (at 1.5 km
resolution). This nest is primarily for Fire
Weather/IMET-DHS
Support (FWIS). The locations of this domain
for each of the
4 NAM
cycles will be determined via a daily coordination call
conducted by the NCEP Senior Duty Meteorologist.
A
sample display of the domain coverage of these new nests is available at:
www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/mmbpll/misc/nmmb_domains.png
Output
grids from the NAM nest runs will be available on the NCEP ftp server
immediately and on the NCEP NOMADS server in the future. The fields contained
in the NAM nest output grids are listed at:
www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/mmbpll/misc/sampleinv_namnests.html
Changes
to parent NAM gridded output on the NCEP ftp server and the NWS ftp server:
a) In
all NAM grids that contain roughness length, the precision
was changed to provide better decimal scaling because many
land-use types have roughness length much less than 1.
b)
Surface slope type was dropped from all NAM output grids as
it is no longer used in the model land-surface physics
c)
Time-averaged surface momentum flux record is being removed
from all NAM GRIB files as it is not defined and thus had
been set to zero in the current operational NAM
d) New
output fields:
- Clear Air Turbulence (Ellrod Index), every 25 mb from
150-525 mb, and Inflight Icing every 25 mb from 300-600 mb,
every 50 mb from 650-950 mb,
and 725 mb; added to grid
#221 (32 km grid over North America)
- 80 km above ground level pressure, temperature, wind, and
specific humidity; added to
grid #221 (32 km grid over
North America), grid #218 (12 km grid over CONUS, pressure
file only) and grid #242
(11.25 km grid over Alaska,
pressure file only).
- Hourly max and min surface fields (10-meter wind, 2-meter
temperature, 2-meter
relative humidity); added to grid
#221 (32 km grid over North America), grid #218 (12 km
grid over CONUS, both
versions) and grid #242 (11.25 km
grid over Alaska).
- Haines Index: Added to grid #218 (12 km grid over CONUS,
both versions) and grid #242
(11.25 km grid over Alaska,
both versions)
- Ventilation Rate: Added to grid #218 (12 km grid over
CONUS) and grid #242 (11.25 km grid over
Alaska).
- Rain and snow on lowest model level: added to grid #218
surface file
"awip12"
- Thunder parameter (called lightning in GRIB): added to
both grid #218 files
e) All
NAM output files on the native horizontal staggered
E-grid of the current operational WRF-NMM
will be on the
staggered B-grid of the NEMS-NMMB. The current native grid
files with names "egrd3d," "edgawp," and "egrdsf" will be
removed from the NCEP FTP server and replaced with files
with
names "bgrd3d", "bgdawp," and "bgrdsf," respectively. Users
who process current NAM native GRIB files with e-grid
staggering will need to modify their software to process
b-grid staggering.
f) To
provide the critical variables used at Weather Forecast
Offices to generate their National Digital
Forecast Database
(NDFD) forecast grids, NCEP will begin to
populate the
current NAM Downscaled Numerical Guidance (DNG - a small set
of 2-dimensional fields) in the 0-60 hr range from the new
high-resolution NAM nested fields instead of the parent NAM
12 km fields. The NAM DNG grids are currently distributed to
CONUS,
Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico over the AWIPS
SBN/NOAAPORT. In response to requests from the NWS
Regions,
NCEP
also plans on producing a CONUS 2.5km NAM-DNG for the
0-60 hr in addition to the current CONUS 5 km version.
A separate TIN will announce the addition of
those 2.5 km
grids to NOAAPORT.
g)
Several users have noted differences in the precision of the
accumulated precipitation at different forecast projections.
With
this upgrade, the precision for all forecast hours will
be standardized.
Product
Delivery Time Change:
NCEP
anticipates that output delivery times after the NAM upgrade will differ
slightly throughout the run compared to the current operational NAM
products. The precise amounts still need to come out of the final
pre-implementation testing by NCEP Central Operations, but the following is the
worst case scenario. When the CONUS Fire Weather nest is run during the first
36 hours of the forecast, product delivery will lag the current delivery by ~13
seconds each forecast hour such that
12hr
PRODUCTS at 01:52:52 (01:50:16)
24hr
PRODUCTS at 02:05:26 (02:00:14)
36hr
PRODUCTS at 02:17:49 (02:10:01)
48hr
PRODUCTS at 02:25:47 (02:19:59)
60hr
PRODUCTS at 02:34:04 (02:30:16)
72hr
PRODUCTS at 02:40:23 (02:38:35)
84hr
PRODUCTS at 02:50:23 (02:50:35)
The
target delivery for 84 hr guidance is 3:00:00.
When
the fire weather nest is over Alaska, product delivery will lag the current
delivery by ~5 seconds each forecast hour such that 36 hour guidance will be
180 seconds or 3 minutes later than at present.
For a
detailed description of this NAM and NDAS upgrade, including verification
statistics, please see:
www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/mmbpll/misc/NAM_Q32011_Upgrade.pdf
For
more general information about the NAM and NDAS, please see:
http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/NAM/
A consistent
parallel feed of data will become available on the NCEP server once the model
is running in parallel on the NCEP Central Computing System by late May.
The parallel data will be available via the
following URLs:
http://www.ftp.ncep.noaa.gov/data/nccf/com/nam/para
ftp://ftp.ncep.noaa.gov/pub/data/nccf/com/nam/para
NCEP
has tried to anticipate all filename and product content changes associated
with this implementation, but if we discover additional changes during the
course of the testing, we will send an amended version of this TIN with that
information as soon as possible.
NCEP
urges all users to ensure their decoders can handle changes in content order,
changes in the scaling factor component within the product definition section
(PDS) of the GRIB files, and volume changes. These elements may change with
future NCEP model implementations. NCEP will make every attempt to alert users
to these changes before implementation.
For
questions regarding these changes, please contact:
Geoff DiMego
NCEP/Mesoscale Modeling Branch
Camp Springs, Maryland
301-763-8000 X 7221
or
Eric Rogers
NCEP/Mesoscale Modeling Branch
Camp Springs, Maryland
301-763-8000 X 7227
For
questions regarding the dataflow aspects of these datasets, please contact:
Rebecca Cosgrove
NCEP/NCO Dataflow Team
Camp Springs, Maryland 20746
301-763-8000 X 7198
NWS
National Technical Implementation Notices are online at:
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/notif.htm
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