Hi Hector,
I hope you don't mind me cc'ing this reply to the group, these are some
good questions and might be useful for others too, so let me first
clarify on what these workflows are doing.
Hi all WxChallenge Crew,
Please continue to report problems and errors using the feedback form on
the portal, but also feel free to post any questions or doubts to
leadusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Non-meteorologists like me can learn from
you all atmospheric science student interactions.
Note: Refer to Marcus's screen cast tutorials sent earlier today on
instructions if you are having problems in using the portal.
In the lead portal, among the list of 7 sample workflows you will see
two forecasting workflows NAM initialized WRF forecast and ADAS
Initialized WRF Forecast. Both these workflows use similar data to
define the lateral boundary conditions for WRF but the difference
between them is in the Initialization Data which is interpolated to
forecast grid and used to initialize the WRF Model.
NAM Initialized workflows uses NAM model data for initialization. NAM
data is obtained from NCEP, which is WRF 84 hour forecast data run over
CONUS with 40km resolution every 6 hours (00, 06, 12, 18, 24 UTC). If
you login to portal, in your MyWorkspace personal data browser,
expanding the experiment you should see a input data files collection
with names similar to eta40grb.2007020706f00 (NAM was previously called
eta and grb indicates the file is in gridded binary format and f00
indicates it is the 0th hour of the 84 hour nam forecast starting 06Z on
02/07/2007). The first eta*** file is used to initialize the model and
rest of the forecast hourly files are used to define the lateral
boundary conditions for forecast time steps, centered in your defined area.
ADAS Initialized workflows use OU-CAPS's ADAS assimilated data to
initialize the WRF model. ADAS workflows are supposed to yield better
forecast as they assimilate the NAM data along with other data from
radars, satellites, rawinsondes, mesonets, wind profilers, aircrafts and
other surface data. Similar to your NAM experiments you can view ADAS
input used. In your input data collection there will files with names
like ad2007020818.nc (adas assimilation done at 18Z on 02/08/2007 in
netcdf format) . You will also see some eta** files because even though
ADAS workflows uses ADAS data to initialize they also use NAM data for
defining lateral boundary conditions similar to NAM initialized workflow.
In both of the above cases within input data file collections if you
click on the files, on the right hand pane you will see some metadata
(description about the data). There will be information on what the file
is, and the boundaries of the spatial extents of the data.
If you look further down in your experiment you will see lot of
intermediate files and most of them are not IDV viewable at this point,
but if you are interested you can download them and look at the data by
using ncdump or other netcdf utilities.
Finally what you need to be looking at in IDV is the WRF output files
which are of the format wrfout_d01_date_and_time.nc
Hector, To answer your questions specifically, you should be opening the
wrfout*** files in IDV and looking at them and optionally you can also
open the eta** files too and compare them with WRF output. But your
focus and readings should be with wrfout files. IDV will let you overlay
one data set over another and visually compare them. As for less
parameters issue, if you are looking for anything specific necessary
parameter and it is not there, report it in feedback form (or discuss
with Everette or Rich) and meteorology group in LEAD can verify it and
add to WRF configuration (registry file) if needed.
Tom et al,
Can you answer Hector's IDV questions and correct if i have stated
anything incorrectly?
Thanks,
Suresh
Hector De Lima wrote:
Hello Suresh,
I've been testing Lead these last couple of days and I have a few
doubts I thought you might be able to clarify:
1) For a 6hr run with 02/07/2007 data, what is the difference between
opening in IDV the file wrfout_d01_2007-02-07_06_00_00.nc as compared
to opening eta40grb.2007020706f00
The first one (wrfout...) is the one that the movie tutorial, or
screencast, recommends you to open after the experiment is finished
processing. Nevertheless, it seems that the second (eta...) covers
more display fields. I guess I am confused as to which file from the
Personal Workspace is the correct one to select in order to view in
IDV the product of your experiment. I started with a NAM initialized
WRF forecast.
2) I've noticed that a few display fields do not show anything when I
select the entire CONUS but will display something when the selected
area in IDV is smaller. Is this normal, an error or something wrong
with my terminal?
3) How do you change the units of fields such as temperature? Most
(except SST's) seem to be displayed in Kelvin.
Thanks a lot for your time.
Hector De Lima
(Testing with FIT)
On 2/15/07, *Suresh Marru* <smarru@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:smarru@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Hi All,
Hope you guys are having a good testing experience. As some of you
might
have already noticed, some workflow fail when WRF runs longer and
sends
an error message from the compute cluster which contains
"grid-hg.ncsa.teragrid.org <http://grid-hg.ncsa.teragrid.org>
Error Code = 131", we know how to limit this
but we are not working around it so that we could reproduce it which
will help the cluster administrators nail this down. This is just
FYI,
irrespective of this error please continue to test the portal and
report
your feed back and problems. We will fix this problem ASAP so you
could
have end to end testing experience again.
Sorry for the inconvenience ,
Suresh
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