Award Abstract # 0710631
Influence of Urbanization on Weather in the Arid Phoenix Metropolitan Area
| NSF Org: |
AGS
Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences
|
| Recipient: |
ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
|
| Initial Amendment Date: |
August 21, 2007 |
| Latest Amendment Date: |
June 4, 2009 |
| Award Number: |
0710631 |
| Award Instrument: |
Continuing Grant |
| Program Manager: |
Chungu Lu
clu@nsf.gov
(703)292-7110
AGS
Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences
GEO
Directorate For Geosciences
|
| Start Date: |
September 1, 2007 |
| End Date: |
August 31, 2011 (Estimated) |
| Total Intended Award Amount: |
$0.00 |
| Total Awarded Amount to Date: |
$447,808.00 |
| Funds Obligated to Date: |
FY 2007 = $182,583.00
FY 2008 = $176,127.00
FY 2009 = $89,098.00
|
| History of Investigator: |
-
Susanne
Grossman-Clarke
(Principal Investigator)
sg.clarke@asu.edu
-
C Susan
Grimmond
(Co-Principal Investigator)
-
Joseph
Zehnder
(Former Co-Principal Investigator)
|
| Recipient Sponsored Research Office: |
Arizona State University
660 S MILL AVE STE 312
TEMPE
AZ
US
85281-3670
(480)965-5479
|
| Sponsor Congressional District: |
09
|
| Primary Place of Performance: |
Arizona State University
660 S MILL AVE STE 312
TEMPE
AZ
US
85281-3670
|
Primary Place of Performance Congressional District: |
09
|
| Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): |
NTLHJXM55KZ6
|
| Parent UEI: |
HX59VKHQH1V7
|
| NSF Program(s): |
Physical & Dynamic Meteorology
|
| Primary Program Source: |
040100 NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
040100 NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
|
| Program Reference Code(s): |
0000,
OTHR
|
| Program Element Code(s): |
1525
|
| Award Agency Code: |
4900
|
| Fund Agency Code: |
4900
|
| Assistance Listing Number(s): |
47.050
|
ABSTRACT

An Urban Canopy Model (UCM) coupled with the Noah Land Surface Model (Noah/LSM) is under development at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) for use with the next generation numerical weather prediction model, the Weather Research and Forecast Model (WRF), to improve model performance in urban areas for weather, climate and air quality applications. The WRF/Noah/UCM represents the geometry of urban land use/cover and includes urban specific processes in the surface-energy balance such as anthropogenic heating, radiation trapping, and heat storage in built surfaces.
This research is a collaborative study involving Arizona State University (ASU), King's College London (KCL, Great Britain) and NCAR to apply the WRF/Noah/UCM system to the Phoenix metropolitan area in order to enable the investigation of changes in weather due to the rapid urbanization of the region. First, the WRF/Noah/UCM model performance will be evaluated with comprehensive meteorological and energy flux data obtained from previous urban field experiments under varying climatological and weather conditions and urban architectures. Necessary model refinements will be identified and implemented into WRF. Then, for the Phoenix metropolitan area, the Principal Investigator will investigate if the increasing extent of the urban area affects the development and propagation of summer thunderstorms; how mesoscale circulations due to the variability in urban and rural land use interact with the mesoscale thermal circulations due to complex terrain; and how past and potential future land use changes influence near surface atmospheric state variables and characteristics of the planetary boundary layer.
Intellectual Merit: The goal of the research is to gain a better understanding of meteorological processes potentially influenced by urbanization in the Phoenix metropolitan region. This work will improve the understanding of the development of summer monsoonal thunderstorms in central Arizona and how they are affected by their interaction with urban and terrain induced thermal circulations. Completion of this research will provide an advanced understanding and knowledge about the performance of the newly developed WRF/Noah/UCM under various weather and climate conditions and urban architectures.
Broader Impact: Population and areal coverage of urban regions continue to increase worldwide. The study will contribute to a better understanding of the impact of such anthropogenic land-surface changes on weather, with specific results for the Phoenix metropolitan area. Such changes in weather affect human comfort and health. The weather forecast abilities for the region will be enhanced through an improved understanding of the effects of urbanization on thunderstorm development and propagation, as well as the assessment of effects of mesoscale circulations due to surface heterogeneity/patchiness and complex terrain. The study leads to an improvement of numerical weather prediction and climate modeling in urban areas in general by identifying necessary model refinements for the WRF/Noah/UCM that will be implemented into the operational/community research version of WRF in cooperation with NCAR.
PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Grossman-Clarke, S., Zehnder, J. A., Loridan, T. and S. B. Grimmond
"Contribution of Historical Land Use Changes to Near Surface Air Temperatures during recent Summer Heat Waves in the Phoenix (Arizona, USA) Metropolitan Area"
Journal of Applied Meteorology
, 2010
10.1175/2010JAMC2362.1
Loridan T, Grimmond CSB, Grossman-Clarke S, Chen F, Tewari M, Manning K, Martilli A, Kusaka H, Best M
"Trade-offs and responsiveness of the single-layer urban canopy parameterization in WRF: an offline evaluation using the MOSCEM optimization algorithm and field observations"
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
, v.136
, 2010
, p.997
10.1002/qj.614
Chen F, Kusaka H, Bornstein R, Ching J, Grimmond CSB, Grossman-Clarke S, Loridan T, Manning KW, Martilli A, Miao S, Sailor D, Salamanca FP, Taha H, Tewari M, Wang X, Wyszogrodzki AA, Zhang C.
"The integrated WRF/urban modelling system: development, evaluation, and applications to urban environmental problems."
International Journal of Climatology
, 2010
10.1002/joc.2158
Chen F, Kusaka H, Bornstein R, Ching J, Grimmond CSB, Grossman-Clarke S, Loridan T, Manning KW, Martilli A, Miao S, Sailor D, Salamanca FP, Taha H, Tewari M, Wang X, Wyszogrodzki AA, Zhang C.
"The integrated WRF/urban modelling system: development, evaluation, and applications to urban environmental problems."
International Journal of Climatology
, v.31
, 2011
, p.273
10.1002/joc.2158
Grossman-Clarke, S; Zehnder, JA; Loridan, T; Grimmond, CSB
"Contribution of Land Use Changes to Near-Surface Air Temperatures during Recent Summer Extreme Heat Events in the Phoenix Metropolitan Area"
JOURNAL OF APPLIED METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
, v.49
, 2010
, p.1649
View record at Web of Science
10.1175/2010JAMC2362.
Loridan, T; Grimmond, CSB; Grossman-Clarke, S; Chen, F; Tewari, M; Manning, K; Martilli, A; Kusaka, H; Best, M
"Trade-offs and responsiveness of the single-layer urban canopy parametrization in WRF: An offline evaluation using the MOSCEM optimization algorithm and field observations"
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
, v.136
, 2010
, p.997
View record at Web of Science
10.1002/qj.61
Loridan, T. and C. S. B. Grimmond
"Characterization of energy flux partitioning in urban environments: links with surface seasonal properties"
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
, 2011
10.1175/JAMC-D-11-038.1
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