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    Forecasting the 8 May 2017 Severe Hail Storm in Denver, Colorado, at a Convection-Allowing Resolution: Understanding Rimed Ice Treatments in Multimoment Microphysics Schemes and Their Effects on Hail Size Forecasts

    Source: Monthly Weather Review:;2019:;volume 147:;issue 008::page 3045
    Author:
    Labriola, Jonathan
    ,
    Snook, Nathan
    ,
    Xue, Ming
    ,
    Thomas, Kevin W.
    DOI: 10.1175/MWR-D-18-0319.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: AbstractDay-ahead (20?22 h) 3-km grid spacing convection-allowing model forecasts are performed for a severe hail event that occurred in Denver, Colorado, on 8 May 2017 using six different multimoment microphysics (MP) schemes including: the Milbrandt?Yau double-moment (MY2), Thompson (THO), NSSL double-moment (NSSL), Morrison double-moment graupel (MOR-G) and hail (MOR-H), and Predicted Particle Properties (P3) schemes. Hail size forecasts diagnosed using the Thompson hail algorithm and storm surrogates predict hail coverage. For this case hail forecasts predict the coverage of hail with a high level of skill but underpredict hail size. The storm surrogate updraft helicity predicts the coverage of severe hail with the most skill for this case. Model data are analyzed to assess the effects of microphysical treatments related to rimed ice. THO uses diagnostic equations to increase the size of graupel within the hail core. MOR-G and MOR-H predict small rimed ice aloft; excessive size sorting and increased fall speeds cause MOR-H to predict more and larger surface hail than MOR-G. The MY2 and NSSL schemes predict large, dense rimed ice particles because both schemes predict separate hail and graupel categories. The NSSL scheme predicts relatively little hail for this case; however, the hail size forecast qualitatively improves when the maximum size of both hail and graupel is considered. The single ice category P3 scheme only predicts dense hail near the surface while above the melting layer large concentrations of low-density ice dominate.
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      Forecasting the 8 May 2017 Severe Hail Storm in Denver, Colorado, at a Convection-Allowing Resolution: Understanding Rimed Ice Treatments in Multimoment Microphysics Schemes and Their Effects on Hail Size Forecasts

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    contributor authorLabriola, Jonathan
    contributor authorSnook, Nathan
    contributor authorXue, Ming
    contributor authorThomas, Kevin W.
    date accessioned2019-10-05T06:54:59Z
    date available2019-10-05T06:54:59Z
    date copyright6/11/2019 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2019
    identifier otherMWR-D-18-0319.1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4263827
    description abstractAbstractDay-ahead (20?22 h) 3-km grid spacing convection-allowing model forecasts are performed for a severe hail event that occurred in Denver, Colorado, on 8 May 2017 using six different multimoment microphysics (MP) schemes including: the Milbrandt?Yau double-moment (MY2), Thompson (THO), NSSL double-moment (NSSL), Morrison double-moment graupel (MOR-G) and hail (MOR-H), and Predicted Particle Properties (P3) schemes. Hail size forecasts diagnosed using the Thompson hail algorithm and storm surrogates predict hail coverage. For this case hail forecasts predict the coverage of hail with a high level of skill but underpredict hail size. The storm surrogate updraft helicity predicts the coverage of severe hail with the most skill for this case. Model data are analyzed to assess the effects of microphysical treatments related to rimed ice. THO uses diagnostic equations to increase the size of graupel within the hail core. MOR-G and MOR-H predict small rimed ice aloft; excessive size sorting and increased fall speeds cause MOR-H to predict more and larger surface hail than MOR-G. The MY2 and NSSL schemes predict large, dense rimed ice particles because both schemes predict separate hail and graupel categories. The NSSL scheme predicts relatively little hail for this case; however, the hail size forecast qualitatively improves when the maximum size of both hail and graupel is considered. The single ice category P3 scheme only predicts dense hail near the surface while above the melting layer large concentrations of low-density ice dominate.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleForecasting the 8 May 2017 Severe Hail Storm in Denver, Colorado, at a Convection-Allowing Resolution: Understanding Rimed Ice Treatments in Multimoment Microphysics Schemes and Their Effects on Hail Size Forecasts
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume147
    journal issue8
    journal titleMonthly Weather Review
    identifier doi10.1175/MWR-D-18-0319.1
    journal fristpage3045
    journal lastpage3068
    treeMonthly Weather Review:;2019:;volume 147:;issue 008
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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