Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Fog forecasting for Schiphol airport at sub-kilometre scale.  

View through CrossRef
<p>Fog is a critical weather phenomenon for safety and operations in aviation. Unfortunately, the forecasting of radiation fog remains challenging due to the numerous physical processes that play a role and their complex interactions, in addition to the vertical and horizontal resolution of the numerical models. In this study we evaluate the performance of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model for a radiation fog event at Schiphol Amsterdam Airport (The Netherlands) and further develop the model towards a 100 m grid spacing. Hence we introduce high resolution land use and land elevation data. In addition we study the role of gravitational droplet settling, advection of TKE, top-down diffusion caused by strong radiative cooling at the fog top. Finally the impact of heat released by the terminal areas on the fog formation is studied. The model outcomes are evaluated against 1-min weather observations near multiple runways at the airport.</p><p>Overall we find the WRF model shows an reasonable timing of the fog onset and is well able to reproduce the visibility and meteorological conditions as observed during the case study. The model appears to be relatively insensitive to the activation of the individual physical processes. An increased spatial resolution to 100 m generally results in a better timing of the fog onset differences up to three hours, though not for all runways. The effect of the refined landuse dominates over the effect of refined elevation data. The modelled fog dissipation systematically occurs 3-4 h hours too early, regardless of physical processes or spatial resolution. Finally, the introduction of heat from terminal buildings delays the fog onset with a maximum of two hours, an overestimated visibility of 100-200 m and a decrease of the LWC with 0.10-0.15 g/kg compared to the reference.</p>
Title: Fog forecasting for Schiphol airport at sub-kilometre scale.  
Description:
<p>Fog is a critical weather phenomenon for safety and operations in aviation.
Unfortunately, the forecasting of radiation fog remains challenging due to the numerous physical processes that play a role and their complex interactions, in addition to the vertical and horizontal resolution of the numerical models.
In this study we evaluate the performance of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model for a radiation fog event at Schiphol Amsterdam Airport (The Netherlands) and further develop the model towards a 100 m grid spacing.
Hence we introduce high resolution land use and land elevation data.
In addition we study the role of gravitational droplet settling, advection of TKE, top-down diffusion caused by strong radiative cooling at the fog top.
Finally the impact of heat released by the terminal areas on the fog formation is studied.
The model outcomes are evaluated against 1-min weather observations near multiple runways at the airport.
</p><p>Overall we find the WRF model shows an reasonable timing of the fog onset and is well able to reproduce the visibility and meteorological conditions as observed during the case study.
The model appears to be relatively insensitive to the activation of the individual physical processes.
An increased spatial resolution to 100 m generally results in a better timing of the fog onset differences up to three hours, though not for all runways.
The effect of the refined landuse dominates over the effect of refined elevation data.
The modelled fog dissipation systematically occurs 3-4 h hours too early, regardless of physical processes or spatial resolution.
Finally, the introduction of heat from terminal buildings delays the fog onset with a maximum of two hours, an overestimated visibility of 100-200 m and a decrease of the LWC with 0.
10-0.
15 g/kg compared to the reference.
</p>.

Related Results

L᾽«unilinguisme» officiel de Constantinople byzantine (VIIe-XIIe s.)
L᾽«unilinguisme» officiel de Constantinople byzantine (VIIe-XIIe s.)
&nbsp; <p>&Nu;ί&kappa;&omicron;&sigmaf; &Omicron;&iota;&kappa;&omicron;&nu;&omicron;&mu;ί&delta;&eta;&sigmaf;</...
Ballistic landslides on comet 67P/Churyumov&#8211;Gerasimenko
Ballistic landslides on comet 67P/Churyumov&#8211;Gerasimenko
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Introduction:&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The slow ejecta (i.e., with velocity lower than escape velocity) and l...
Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;span dir=&quot;ltr&quot; role=&quot;presentation&quot;&gt;1. Introduction&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/strong&...
North Syrian Mortaria and Other Late Roman Personal and Utility Objects Bearing Inscriptions of Good Luck
North Syrian Mortaria and Other Late Roman Personal and Utility Objects Bearing Inscriptions of Good Luck
<span style="font-size: 11pt; color: black; font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'">&Pi;&Eta;&Lambda;&Iota;&Nu;&Alpha; &Iota;&Gamma;&Delta...
Morphometry of an hexagonal pit crater in Pavonis Mons, Mars
Morphometry of an hexagonal pit crater in Pavonis Mons, Mars
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Introduction:&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Pit craters are peculiar depressions found in almost every terrestria...
Case Study of Geological Risk Factors for Earthquake Hazard Mapping in the South Eastern Korea
Case Study of Geological Risk Factors for Earthquake Hazard Mapping in the South Eastern Korea
&#160; In order to interpret geological&#160;risk&#160;assessment&#160;for&#160;Earthquake&#160;hazard&#160;by&#160;mapping work, since geotechnical...
The use of ERDDAP in a self-monitoring and nowcast hazard alerting coastal flood system
The use of ERDDAP in a self-monitoring and nowcast hazard alerting coastal flood system
&lt;div&gt; &lt;p&gt;In the UK,&amp;#160;&amp;#163;150bn of assets and 4 million people are at risk from coastal flooding. With reductions in public funding...
Thermophysical model of asteroid (269) Justitia:&#160; a main-belter out of place
Thermophysical model of asteroid (269) Justitia:&#160; a main-belter out of place
ContextAsteroid (269) Justitia is a main-belt asteroid with unusual surface properties. Its reflectance spectrum is extremely red, unlike any other taxonomic type found in the main...

Back to Top