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contributor authorMcHenry, John N.
contributor authorRyan, William F.
contributor authorSeaman, Nelson L.
contributor authorCoats, Carlie J.
contributor authorPudykiewicz, Janusz
contributor authorArunachalam, Sarav
contributor authorVukovich, Jeffery M.
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:42:31Z
date available2017-06-09T16:42:31Z
date copyright2004/04/01
date issued2004
identifier issn0003-0007
identifier otherams-72697.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4214728
description abstractThis article reports on the first implementation of a real-time Eulerian photochemical model forecast system in the United States. The forecast system consists of a tripartite set of one-way coupled models that run routinely on a parallel microprocessor supercomputer. The component models are the fifth-generation Pennsylvania State University (PSU)?NCAR Mesoscale Model (MM5), the Sparse-Matrix Operator Kernel for Emissions (SMOKE) model, and the Multiscale Air Quality Simulation Platform?Real Time (MAQSIP-RT) photochemical model. Though the system has been run in real time since the summer of 1998, forecast results obtained during August of 2001 at 15-km grid spacing over New England and the northern mid-Atlantic?conducted as part of an ?early start? NOAA air quality forecasting initiative?are described in this article. The development and deployment of a real-time numerical air quality prediction (NAQP) system is technically challenging. MAQSIP-RT contains a full pho-tochemical oxidant gas-phase chemical mechanism together with transport, dry deposition, and sophisticated cloud treatment. To enable the NAQP system to run fast enough to meet operational forecast deadlines, significant work was devoted to data flow design and software engineering of the models and control codes. The result is a turnkey system now in use by a number of agencies concerned with operational ozone forecasting. Results of the chosen episode are compared against three other models/modeling techniques: a traditional statistical model used routinely in the metropolitan Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, area, a set of publicly issued forecasts in the northeastern United States, and the operational Canadian Hemispheric and Regional Ozone and NOx System (CHRONOS) model. For the test period it is shown that the NAQP system performs as well or better than all of these operational approaches. Implications for the impending development of an operational U.S. ozone forecasting capability are discussed in light of these results.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleA Real-Time Eulerian Photochemical Model Forecast System: Overview and Initial Ozone Forecast Performance in the Northeast U.S. Corridor
typeJournal Paper
journal volume85
journal issue4
journal titleBulletin of the American Meteorological Society
identifier doi10.1175/BAMS-85-4-525
journal fristpage525
journal lastpage548
treeBulletin of the American Meteorological Society:;2004:;volume( 085 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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