Projects

363548-191001-021000
NA19OAR4590411
N/A
9/1/2019
2021-8-31 0:0:0
Completed
$1,477,676.00
Developing New Capabilities and Research Applications for the National Water Model Over the Southeastern US
Dyer
Jamie
MSU
Mercer
Andrew
MSU
CH-CE
OAR
New capabilities for the National Water Model (NWM) were made possible by the implementation of the model within the Unified Forecast System (UFS) and development of applications to water-related issues across the Southeast US. Researchers implemented and tested the NWM over sub-domains within this region focusing on data flow and coupling methods, calibration of model parameters, and assessment of output accuracy and precision in short-range (hours to days) and medium-range (days to two weeks) simulations. This effort included hydrologic simulations at these time scales to provide water-related quality and quantity information. Evaluations were conducted on the NWM’s ability to address extreme conditions such as flood and drought and to address data needs for simulating a variety of hydrologic conditions, including groundwater withdrawals for municipal and agricultural uses, land use, leaf area index, and soil moisture values and their influence on the precision and accuracy of NWM output. A parallel version of the WRF-Hydro model with the same configuration and parameterization as the medium-range NWM operational framework was compiled and tested; the sensitivity of near-surface temperature and moisture patterns over the Southeast US was quantified within the WRF-Hydro model framework; and historical NWM output was compared against observed recorded data during low flow events.