stormchasegenie
Member
Colleagues,
As an experienced WRF user, I have an embarrassing question.
Build-up:
metgrid.exe provides the met_em files that contain pressure level data ingested by real.exe in the creation of the lower/lateral boundary condition, nudging, and initialization file.
In many driving isobaric datasets (e.g. ERA5), there are many below-ground gridcells that are populated with extrapolated values over complex terrain. If I set these same gridcells to something crazy (-9.99d+12) and run metgrid.exe, real.exe subsequently crashes. This indicates that real.exe may be pulling data from below-ground gridcells in the met_em files(?)
On a related note, in preprocessing GCM input binaries, I am finding that my wrf.exe results near areas of complex terrain are somewhat sensitive to whether or not I use vinth2p with numerical extrapolation or vinth2p_ecmwf with physical extrapolation (in NCL) at below-ground gridcells.
As a climate modeler, these differences disturb me.
Since my soil/skin temperatures do not suffer from this issue, and because this issue arises at a small percentage of my total gridcells, I am wondering just how much uncertainty is being introduced into my modeling framework as a result of changing the extrapolation method across gridcells that should be below-ground and thus not used(?)
This is a philosophical question, so I will not attach technical info for the moment...
-Stefan Rahimi, UCLA
As an experienced WRF user, I have an embarrassing question.
Build-up:
metgrid.exe provides the met_em files that contain pressure level data ingested by real.exe in the creation of the lower/lateral boundary condition, nudging, and initialization file.
In many driving isobaric datasets (e.g. ERA5), there are many below-ground gridcells that are populated with extrapolated values over complex terrain. If I set these same gridcells to something crazy (-9.99d+12) and run metgrid.exe, real.exe subsequently crashes. This indicates that real.exe may be pulling data from below-ground gridcells in the met_em files(?)
On a related note, in preprocessing GCM input binaries, I am finding that my wrf.exe results near areas of complex terrain are somewhat sensitive to whether or not I use vinth2p with numerical extrapolation or vinth2p_ecmwf with physical extrapolation (in NCL) at below-ground gridcells.
As a climate modeler, these differences disturb me.
Since my soil/skin temperatures do not suffer from this issue, and because this issue arises at a small percentage of my total gridcells, I am wondering just how much uncertainty is being introduced into my modeling framework as a result of changing the extrapolation method across gridcells that should be below-ground and thus not used(?)
This is a philosophical question, so I will not attach technical info for the moment...
-Stefan Rahimi, UCLA