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Abstract This study investigates the influence of land surface processes on short-spell monsoonal heavy rainfall events under varying soil wetness conditions in India, using the Weather Research and Forecasting Model coupled with two land surface schemes: Noah and SLAB. To represent contrasting soil conditions, four rainfall events are chosen, two in onset (June) and two in active (August) months, during the Indian summer monsoon season. The results indicate that rainfall sensitivity differs notably between onset and active cases. Specifically, in onset, the SLAB overpredicts rainfall to the north of the storm compared to the Noah. The northward displacement of rainfall is attributed to the sensitivity of evapotranspiration to the preferential soil moisture regime in onset. Furthermore, the higher surface air saturation deficit in onset favors plant transpiration, resulting in increased boundary layer moisture. This contributes to enhanced moist static energy, thereby affecting potential vorticity and precipitation. In contrast, evapotranspiration sensitivity is modest during active months, under wet soil and lower surface air saturation deficit conditions. The study reveals the distinct soil moisture feedback mechanisms during the onset and active phases, through variations in evapotranspiration sensitivity. Variations in soil moisture and surface air saturation deficit in these phases play a crucial role in modulating evapotranspiration, which in turn affects precipitation. These findings underscore the importance of land surface initialization and land data assimilation in land–atmosphere interaction studies.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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null (Ed.)We present a Photo2Building tool to create a plausible 3D model of a building from only a single photograph. Our tool is based on a prior desktop version which, as described in this paper, is converted into a client-server model, with job queuing, web-page support, and support of concurrent usage. The reported cloud-based web-accessible tool can reconstruct a building in 40 seconds on average and costing only 0.60 USD with current pricing. This provides for an extremely scalable and possibly widespread tool for creating building models for use in urban design and planning applications. With the growing impact of rapid urbanization on weather and climate and resource availability, access to such a service is expected to help a wide variety of users such as city planners, urban meteorologists worldwide in the quest to improved prediction of urban weather and designing climate-resilient cities of the future.more » « less
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The WUDAPT (World Urban Database and Access Portal Tools project goal is to capture consistent information on urban form and function for cities worldwide that can support urban weather, climate, hydrology and air quality modeling. These data are provided as urban canopy parameters (UCPs) as used by weather, climate and air quality models to simulate the effects of urban surfaces on the overlying atmosphere. Information is stored with different levels of detail (LOD). With higher LOD greater spatial precision is provided. At the lowest LOD, Local Climate Zones (LCZ) with nominal UCP ranges is provided (order 100 m or more). To describe the spatial heterogeneity present in cities with great specificity at different urban scales we introduce the Digital Synthetic City (DSC) tool to generate UCPs at any desired scale meeting the fit-for-purpose goal of WUDAPT. 3D building and road elements of entire city landscapes are simulated based on readily available data. Comparisons with real-world urban data are very encouraging. It is customized (C-DSC) to incorporate each city's unique building morphologies based on unique types, variations and spatial distribution of building typologies, architecture features, construction materials and distribution of green and pervious surfaces. The C-DSC uses crowdsourcing methods and sampling within city Testbeds from around the world. UCP data can be computed from synthetic images at selected grid sizes and stored such that the coded string provides UCP values for individual grid cells.more » « less
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