Tropical cyclones (TCs) can subject an area to heavy precipitation for many hours, or even days, worsening the risk of flooding, which creates dangerous conditions for residents of the U.S. East and Gulf Coasts. To study the representation of TC-related precipitation over the eastern United States in current-generation global climate models, a novel analysis methodology is developed to track TCs and extract their associated precipitation using an estimate of their dynamical outer size. This methodology is applied to three variable-resolution (VR) configurations of the Community Atmosphere Model, version 5 (CAM5), with high-resolution domains over the North Atlantic and one low-resolution conventional configuration, as well as to a combination of reanalysis and observational precipitation data. Metrics and diagnostics such as TC counts, intensities, outer storm sizes, and annual mean total and extreme precipitation are compared between the CAM5 simulations and reanalysis/observations. The high-resolution VR configurations outperform the global low-resolution configuration for all variables in the North Atlantic. Realistic TC intensities are pro-duced by the VR configurations. The total North Atlantic TC counts are lower than observations but better than reanalysis.
CITATION STYLE
Stansfield, A. M., Reed, K. A., Zarzycki, C. M., Ullrich, P. A., & Chavas, D. R. (2020). Assessing tropical cyclones’ contribution to precipitation over the Eastern United States and sensitivity to the variable-resolution domain extent. Journal of Hydrometeorology, 21(7), 1425–1445. https://doi.org/10.1175/JHM-D-19-0240.1
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