Impact of Adjusted and Nonadjusted Surface Observations on the Cold Season Performance of the Canadian Precipitation Analysis (CaPA) System
Type de ressource
            
        Auteurs/contributeurs
                    - Feng, Pei-Ning (Auteur)
 - Bélair, Stéphane (Auteur)
 - Khedhaouiria, Dikraa (Auteur)
 - Lespinas, Franck (Auteur)
 - Mekis, Eva (Auteur)
 - Thériault, Julie M. (Auteur)
 
Titre
            Impact of Adjusted and Nonadjusted Surface Observations on the Cold Season Performance of the Canadian Precipitation Analysis (CaPA) System
        Résumé
            Abstract
            The Canadian Precipitation Analysis System (CaPA) is an operational system that uses a combination of weather gauge and ground-based radar measurements together with short-term forecasts from a numerical weather model to provide near-real-time estimates of 6- and 24-h precipitation amounts. During the winter season, many gauge measurements are rejected by the CaPA quality control process because of the wind-induced undercatch for solid precipitation. The goal of this study is to improve the precipitation estimates over central Canada during the winter seasons from 2019 to 2022. Two approaches were tested. First, the quality control procedure in CaPA has been relaxed to increase the number of surface observations assimilated. Second, the automatic solid precipitation measurements were adjusted using a universal transfer function to compensate for the undercatch problem. Although increasing the wind speed threshold resulted in lower amounts and worse biases in frequency, the overall precipitation estimates are improved as the equitable threat score is improved because of a substantial decrease in the false alarm ratio, which compensates the degradation of the probability of detection. The increase of solid precipitation amounts using a transfer function improves the biases in both frequency and amounts and the probability of detection for all precipitation thresholds. However, the false alarm ratio deteriorates for large thresholds. The statistics vary from year to year, but an overall improvement is demonstrated by increasing the number of stations and adjusting the solid precipitation amounts for wind speed undercatch.
        Publication
            Journal of Hydrometeorology
        Volume
            25
        Numéro
            1
        Pages
            27-45
        Date
            01/2024
        ISSN
            1525-755X, 1525-7541
        Consulté le
            06/11/2024 15:49
        Catalogue de bibl.
            DOI.org (Crossref)
        Autorisations
            
        Notes
            Export Date: 21 August 2025; Cited By: 2
Référence
            Feng, P.-N., Bélair, S., Khedhaouiria, D., Lespinas, F., Mekis, E., & Thériault, J. M. (2024). Impact of Adjusted and Nonadjusted Surface Observations on the Cold Season Performance of the Canadian Precipitation Analysis (CaPA) System. Journal of Hydrometeorology, 25(1), 27–45. https://doi.org/10.1175/JHM-D-23-0070.1
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