Convective Modeling Group Links

April 19 study Current MM5 research (restricted)

Modeling the April 19, 1996 outbreak

We are using the Penn. State/NCAR MM5 model to simulate the severe thunderstorms on this day. The high temporal and spatial resolution in the model fields will allow us to better analyze and understand the convective initiation and evolution in the mid-to-late- afternoon on April 19. Our simulations are being carried out on the Origin2000 at NCSA.

We have completed simulations at 3 km horizontal resolution and have recently begun modeling at 1 km. 66 vertical layers are used, with vertical resolution of approximately 60 m near the ground increasing to 600 m aloft. Key characteristics:

Simulation layout
Grid is... Resolution Domain Start Comments All domains
1 Outer 81 km 45x30 00z Init. w/data (most of U.S.)
b&w / color
2 Nest 27 km 61x46 00z Init. w/data (Plains-midwest)
3 Nest 9 km 115x94 00z IA/MO/IL, init. from grid 2
4 Nest 3 km 211x181 18z se IA, ne MO, most of IL
5 Nest 1 km 250x250 20z ne MO/sw IL, moved w/storms
Grid layout is shown here; upper-air station locations are plotted here.

Recent results


1-km MM5 fields valid 22:36 UTC 19 April, looking north
Click on image for animation

The 3- and 1-km results reproduce many aspects of the actual convective behavior on this day, in particular cell formation in eastern MO, splitting and merging, and (in the 3-km runs; 1 km is incomplete) emergence of long-lived rotating cells which move into central IL, as actually occurred. The modeled convection also moves off the drytrough boundary.

We are examining animated cross-section fields to study the initiation and movement relative to the cold front aloft (CFA) in the simulation, and have begun idealized studies to further study cell interaction.


A conference paper on this work appears here. Simulations were carried out on the NCSA Origin2000 system. This work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants ATM 96-33228 and ATM 99-86672. Computing, visualization and other support provided by NCSA.
Brian F. Jewett | bjewett@ncsa.uiuc.edu | homepage | NCSA convective storms group