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Correcting Coarse-Resolution Weather and Climate Models by Machine Learning from Global Storm-Resolving Simulations
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  • Christopher Bretherton,
  • Brian Henn,
  • Anna Kwa,
  • Noah Brenowitz,
  • Jeremy McGibbon,
  • Spencer Clark,
  • Andre Perkins,
  • Lucas Harris
Christopher Bretherton
AI2

Corresponding Author:breth@washington.edu

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Brian Henn
AI2
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Anna Kwa
AI2
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Noah Brenowitz
AI2
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Jeremy McGibbon
AI2
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Spencer Clark
AI2
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Andre Perkins
AI2
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Lucas Harris
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, NOAA
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Abstract

Global atmospheric ‘storm-resolving’ models with horizontal grid spacing of less than 5~km resolve deep cumulus convection and flow in complex terrain. They promise to be reference models that could be used to improve computationally affordable coarse-grid global climate models across a range of climates, reducing uncertainties in regional precipitation and temperature trends. Here, machine learning of nudging tendencies as functions of column state is used to correct the physical parameterization tendencies of temperature, humidity, and optionally winds, in a real-geography coarse-grid model (FV3GFS with a 200 km grid) to be closer to those of a 40-day reference simulation using X-SHiELD, a modified version of FV3GFS with a 3 km grid. Both simulations specify the same historical sea-surface temperature fields. This methodology builds on a prior study using a global observational analysis as the reference. The coarse-grid model without machine learning corrections has too little cloud, causing too much daytime heating of land surfaces that creates excessive surface latent heat flux and rainfall. This bias is avoided by learning downwelling radiative flux from the fine-grid model. The best configuration uses learned nudging tendencies for temperature and humidity but not winds. Neural nets slightly outperform random forests. Forecasts of 850 hPa temperature gain 18 hours of skill at 3-7 day leads and time-mean precipitation patterns are improved 30% by applying the ML correction. Adding machine-learned wind tendencies improves 500 hPa height skill for the first five days of forecasts but degrades time-mean upper tropospheric temperature and zonal wind patterns thereafter. The figure shows maps of 30-day time-mean precipitation pattern difference from the fine-grid reference for prognostic simulations: (a) 200 km baseline(no machine learning correction) (b) Using random forest correction and (c) neural net correction for temperature. humidity and surface radiation corrections. RMSE is the root mean squared precipitation difference from the reference, which is 30% less for the two machine-learning corrected simulations compared to the baseline. (d) Bar charts of the land-mean, ocean-mean and global-mean precipitation biases for these three configurations, showing the machine-learning corrected simulations remove a high bias of land surface precipitation in the baseline simulation.