Pullen, S; Jones, C; Rooney, G (2011). Using Satellite-Derived Snow Cover Data to Implement a Snow Analysis in the Met Office Global NWP Model. JOURNAL OF APPLIED METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY, 50(5), 958-973.
Abstract
Snow cover and amount are important components in the interaction between the land surface and atmosphere, but until recently there has been no observational snow information incorporated into the Met Office global numerical weather prediction (NWP) model. This paper presents a Northern Hemisphere (NH) snow analysis, based on satellite-derived observations of snow cover, that has recently been implemented in the operational global Unified Model (UM). The analysis uses daily snow maps from the NOAA National Environmental Satellite Data and Information Service Interactive Multisensor Snow and Ice Mapping System (IMS) to modify the UM background snow amount. Assimilation experiments carried out during the NH snow accumulation and ablation periods show improvements in analyzed snow cover, both qualitatively and quantitatively, when compared with unmodified control runs. Although the effect on forecast accuracy of introducing the snow analysis is largely neutral, there is some evidence of small improvements in screen-level temperature and humidity forecasts. Retention of information introduced by the snow analysis is hard, and so the limited impact on forecast accuracy is not unexpected. Several methods of validation and verification are presented, and their results and implications are discussed. The NH snow analysis delivers a basic snow assimilation system that can be expanded and developed further in future iterations to improve the representation of snow cover and amount in global and regional forecasting models.
DOI:
1558-8424
ISSN:
10.1175/2010JAMC2527.1