Impacts of Northeastern Pacific Buoy Surface Pressure Observations

Abstract

Under the Atmospheric River Reconnaissance (AR Recon) Program, ocean drifting buoys (drifters) that provide surface pressure observations were deployed in the northeastern Pacific Ocean to improve forecasts of U.S. West Coast high-impact weather. We examine the impacts of both AR Recon and non-AR Recon drifter observations in the U.S. Navy’s global atmospheric data assimilation (DA) and forecast system using data-denial experiments and forecast sensitivity observation impact (FSOI) analysis, which estimates the impact of each observation on the 24-h global forecast error total energy. Considering all drifters in the eastern North Pacific for the 2020 AR Recon season, FSOI indicates that most of the beneficial impacts come from observations in the lowest quartile of observed surface pressure values, particularly those taken late in the DA window. Observations in the upper quartile have near-neutral impacts on average and are slightly nonbeneficial when taken late in the DA window. This may occur because the DA configuration used here does not account for model biases, and innovation statistics show that the forecast model has a low pressure bias at high pressures. Case studies and other analyses indicate large beneficial impacts coming from observations in regions with large surface pressure gradients and integrated vapor transport, such as fronts and ARs. Data-denial experiments indicate that the assimilation of AR Recon drifter observations results in a better-constrained analysis at nearby non-AR Recon drifter locations and counteracts the NAVGEM pressure bias. Assimilating the AR Recon drifter observations improves 72- and 96-h Northern Hemisphere forecasts of winds in the lower and middle troposphere, and geopotential height in the lower, middle, and upper troposphere.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2023
Source ID
10.1175/mwr-d-22-0124.1

Entities

People

  • Aneesh C. Subramanian
  • Anna M. Wilson
  • Carolyn Reynolds
  • David A. Lavers
  • F. Martin Ralph
  • James D. Doyle
  • Luca Centurioni
  • Nancy L. Baker
  • Rebecca E. Stone

Organizations

  • Bakersfield Department of Water Resources
  • Engineer Research and Development Center
  • European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • Science Applications International Corporation
  • United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • University of California

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Military Science
  • Ocean-Atmosphere Mesoscale Modeling, Data Assimilation, and Flux Boundary Layers