Monday, 10 January 2000: 10:45 AM
Michael G. Bosilovich, NASA/USRA, Greenbelt, MD; and S. Schubert, A. Molod, and L. L. Takacs
Analysis of precipitation recycling can aid in the
understanding and evolution of regional hydrologic
anomalies. Diagnostic models of the recycling of
precipitation and are applied to 15 years of the NASA
Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) Data Assimilation
System (DAS). Recycled precipitation is defined as the
fraction of precipitation within a given region that
originated as surface evaporation from the same region.
The focus of the present work is on the interannual
variability of the central United States hydrologic cycle
and precipitation recycling. The extreme years of 1988
(drought) and 1993 (flood) are compared with the 15 year
base period mean annual cycle.
The results indicate that recycling ratio (the amount of
precipitation with a local source relative to the total
precipitation) is greater in 1988 than both the base
period mean and the 1993 season (with 1993 recycling
ratio less than the mean). On the other hand, both the
summers of 1988 and 1993 show less total recycled
precipitation than the mean. The results also show that
precipitation recycling may have been more important in
the spring of 1993 than the summer. The dignostic
approaches to precipitaiton recycling suffer from some
weaknesses. Numerical simulations and assimilation using
passive tracers have the potential to provide more
accurate calculations of precipitation recycling and the
remote sources of water. This ability is being
incorporated into the latest GEOS data assimilation
system, and some preliminary results will be presented.
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