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Assimilation of NASA's Airborne Snow Observatory Snow Measurements for Improved Hydrological Modeling: A Case Study Enabled by the Coupled LIS/WRF‐Hydro System

Timothy M. Lahmers, Sujay V. Kumar, Dan Rosen, A. L. Dugger, David Gochis, Joseph A. Santanello, Chandana Gangodagamage, Rocky Dunlap

2022Water Resources Research41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The NASA LIS/WRF‐Hydro system is a coupled modeling framework that combines the modeling and data assimilation (DA) capabilities of the NASA Land Information System (LIS) with the multi‐scale surface hydrological modeling capabilities of the WRF‐Hydro model, both of which are widely used in both operations and research. This coupled modeling framework builds on the linkage between land surface models (LSMs), which simulate surface boundary conditions in atmospheric models, and distributed hydrologic models, which simulate horizontal surface and sub‐surface flow, adding new land DA capabilities. In the present study, we employ this modeling framework in the Tuolumne River basin in central California. We demonstrate the added value of the assimilation of NASA Airborne Snow Observatory (ASO) snow water equivalent (SWE) estimates in the Tuolumne basin. This analysis is performed in both LIS as an LSM column model and LIS/WRF‐Hydro, with hydrologic routing. Results demonstrate that ASO DA in the basin reduced snow bias by as much as 30% from an open‐loop (OL) simulation compared to three independent datasets. It also reduces downstream streamflow runoff biases by as much as 40%, and improves streamflow skill scores in both wet and dry years. Analysis of soil moisture and evapotranspiration (ET) also reveals the impacts of hydrologic routing from WRF‐Hydro in the simulations, which would otherwise not be resolved in an LSM column model. By demonstrating the beneficial impact of SWE DA on the improving streamflow forecasts, the article outlines the importance of such observational inputs for reservoir operations and related water management applications.

Topics & Concepts

Weather Research and Forecasting ModelStreamflowEnvironmental scienceData assimilationEvapotranspirationFlow routingHydrological modellingSnowSurface runoffHydrometeorologyMeteorologyHydrology (agriculture)PrecipitationClimatologyDrainage basinGeologyGeographyEcologyGeotechnical engineeringBiologyCartographyCryospheric studies and observationsHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesClimate change and permafrost
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