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MESMAR v1: a new regional coupled climate model for downscaling, predictability, and data assimilation studies in the Mediterranean region

TitleMESMAR v1: a new regional coupled climate model for downscaling, predictability, and data assimilation studies in the Mediterranean region
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsStorto, Andrea, Essa Yassmin Hesham, De Toma Vincenzo, Anav A., Sannino Gianmaria, Santoleri Rosalia, and Yang Chunxue
JournalGeoscientific Model Development
Volume16
Pagination4811 – 4833
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1991959X
Abstract

Regional coupled and Earth system models are fundamental numerical tools for climate investigations, downscaling of predictions and projections, process-oriented understanding of regional extreme events, and many more applications. Here we introduce a newly developed coupled regional modeling framework for the Mediterranean region, called MESMAR (Mediterranean Earth System model at ISMAR) version 1, which is composed of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) atmospheric model, the NEMO oceanic model, and the hydrological discharge (HD) model, coupled via the OASIS coupler. The model is implemented at about 1/12° of horizontal resolution for the ocean and river routing, while roughly twice coarser for the atmosphere, and it is targeted to long-term investigations. We focus on the evaluation of skill score metrics from several sensitivity experiments devoted to (i) understanding the best vertical physics configuration for NEMO, (ii) identifying the impact of the interactive river runoff, and (iii) choosing the best-performing physics-microphysics suite for WRF in the regional coupled system. The modeling system has been developed for downscaling reanalyses and long-range predictions, as well as coupled data assimilation experiments. We then formulate and show the performance of the system when weakly coupled data assimilation is embedded in the system (variational assimilation in the ocean and spectral nudging in the atmosphere), in particular for the representation of extreme events like intense Mediterranean cyclones (i.e., medicanes). Finally, we outline plans for future extension of the modeling framework. © 2023 Copernicus GmbH. All rights reserved.

Notes

Cited by: 0; All Open Access, Gold Open Access, Green Open Access

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85172930508&doi=10.5194%2fgmd-16-4811-2023&partnerID=40&md5=8f6c72947eff82bab87087385e5a9f06
DOI10.5194/gmd-16-4811-2023
Citation KeyStorto20234811