UMBC High Performance Computing Facility : A Statistical Comparison of Small-Scale Features in Simulated Tropical Cyclones and High-Resolution Observational Data
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Lynn Sparling and Samuel Trahan, Department of Physics, UMBC, and Scott Braun, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center A Statistical Comparison of Small-Scale Features in Simulated Tropical Cyclones and High-Resolution Observational Data abstract: Over the past few decades, there has been significant improvement in tropical cyclone track prediction but not much improvement in intensity prediction. There is evidence that small-scale processes in the inner core may play an important role in hurricane intensity but these processes, and what triggers them, are only partially understood. The features – eyewall vorticity waves, mesovortices and hot towers – are on the order of kilometers wide and rapidly varying. Hence high-resolution models are thought to be necessary, but it is not clear how well high-resolution features in simulated tropical cyclones match those in the real world. It This research uses WRF-based numerical weather prediction models to imulate |
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