TY - JOUR A1 - Bürger, Gerd T1 - Intraseasonal oscillation indices from complex EOFs JF - Journal of climate N2 - Indices of oscillatory behavior are conveniently obtained by projecting the fields in question into a phase space of a few (mostly just two) dimensions; empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs) or other, more dynamical, modes are typically used for the projection. If sufficiently coherent and in quadrature, the projected variables simply describe a rotating vector in the phase space, which then serves as the basis for predictions. Using the boreal summer intraseasonal oscillation (BSISO) as a test case, an alternative procedure is introduced: it augments the original fields with their Hilbert transform (HT) to form a complex series and projects it onto its (single) dominant EOF. The real and imaginary parts of the corresponding complex pattern and index are compared with those of the original (real) EOF. The new index explains slightly less variance of the physical fields than the original, but it is much more coherent, partly from its use of future information by the HT. Because the latter is in the way of real-time monitoring, the index can only be used in cases with predicted physical fields, for which it promises to be superior. By developing a causal approximation of the HT, a real-time variant of the index is obtained whose coherency is comparable to the noncausal version, but with smaller explained variance of the physical fields. In test cases the new index compares well to other indices of BSISO. The potential for using both indices as an alternative is discussed. KW - Madden-Julian oscillation KW - Oscillations KW - Empirical orthogonal functions KW - Filtering techniques KW - Statistical techniques KW - Forecasting techniques Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-20-0427.1 SN - 0894-8755 SN - 1520-0442 VL - 34 IS - 1 SP - 107 EP - 122 PB - American Meteorological Soc. CY - Boston ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ayzel, Georgy A1 - Heistermann, Maik T1 - The effect of calibration data length on the performance of a conceptual hydrological model versus LSTM and GRU BT - a case study for six basins from the CAMELS dataset JF - Computers & geosciences : an international journal devoted to the publication of papers on all aspects of geocomputation and to the distribution of computer programs and test data sets ; an official journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology N2 - We systematically explore the effect of calibration data length on the performance of a conceptual hydrological model, GR4H, in comparison to two Artificial Neural Network (ANN) architectures: Long Short-Term Memory Networks (LSTM) and Gated Recurrent Units (GRU), which have just recently been introduced to the field of hydrology. We implemented a case study for six river basins across the contiguous United States, with 25 years of meteorological and discharge data. Nine years were reserved for independent validation; two years were used as a warm-up period, one year for each of the calibration and validation periods, respectively; from the remaining 14 years, we sampled increasing amounts of data for model calibration, and found pronounced differences in model performance. While GR4H required less data to converge, LSTM and GRU caught up at a remarkable rate, considering their number of parameters. Also, LSTM and GRU exhibited the higher calibration instability in comparison to GR4H. These findings confirm the potential of modern deep-learning architectures in rainfall runoff modelling, but also highlight the noticeable differences between them in regard to the effect of calibration data length. KW - Artificial neural networks KW - Calibration KW - Deep learning KW - Rainfall-runoff KW - modelling Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cageo.2021.104708 SN - 0098-3004 SN - 1873-7803 VL - 149 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lange, Bastian A1 - Bürkner, Hans-Joachim T1 - Geographien experimenteller Arbeitsformen BT - offene Werkstätten als Auskunftgeber über Mikro-Produktionsstandorte in Postwachstumskontexten JF - Mitteilungen der Österreichischen Geographischen Gesellschaft N2 - Die Diskussion um Postwachstumsprozesse hat die kleinen, früher unbeachtet gebliebenen Orte der Innovation entdeckt. Ungeplant und unkoordiniert entstandene Produktions- und Arbeitsformen wie zum Beispiel Fab Labs, Offene Werkstätten, Reallabore, Techshops, Repair Cafés und andere entziehen sich weitgehend den gewohnten Erklärungs- und Beschreibungskategorien der sozialwissenschaftlichen Forschung. Die Komplexität ihrer Erscheinungsformen, ihre heterogene Verursachung, ihre kontingente Weiterentwicklung und ihre hybriden Arbeitsprozesse erfordern ergebnisoffene analytische Rekonstruktionen. Das Ziel dieses Beitrags ist es, auf der Basis praxisnaher Tätigkeitsbeschreibungen jeweils Prozesse der Raumkontextualisierung und -zuschreibung zu rekonstruieren. Dies geschieht auf der Basis der leitenden Frage, inwieweit neue Arbeitsformen mit spezifischen Raumbezügen einhergehen und eine differenzierte Sicht auf unterschiedliche Prozesse der Ortsbildung erforderlich machen. Als analytischer Referenzfall werden Offene Werkstätten und die in ihnen vorherrschenden Arbeitsformen genauer betrachtet. KW - experimentelle Arbeitsformen KW - Innovationsorte KW - Hybridität KW - Alltagskultur und Ökonomie KW - Heterogenität KW - Wertschöpfung Y1 - 2021 SN - 978-3-901313-34-9 SN - 978-3-7001-8885-8 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1553/moegg162s287 SN - 0029-9138 SN - 2708-0307 VL - 162 SP - 287 EP - 312 PB - Österreichische Geographische Gesellschaft CY - Wien ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Vogel, Johannes A1 - Paton, Eva Nora A1 - Aich, Valentin T1 - Seasonal ecosystem vulnerability to climatic anomalies in the Mediterranean JF - Biogeosciences N2 - Mediterranean ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to climate change and the associated increase in climate anomalies. This study investigates extreme ecosystem responses evoked by climatic drivers in the Mediterranean Basin for the time span 1999–2019 with a specific focus on seasonal variations as the seasonal timing of climatic anomalies is considered essential for impact and vulnerability assessment. A bivariate vulnerability analysis is performed for each month of the year to quantify which combinations of the drivers temperature (obtained from ERA5-Land) and soil moisture (obtained from ESA CCI and ERA5-Land) lead to extreme reductions in ecosystem productivity using the fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (FAPAR; obtained from the Copernicus Global Land Service) as a proxy. The bivariate analysis clearly showed that, in many cases, it is not just one but a combination of both drivers that causes ecosystem vulnerability. The overall pattern shows that Mediterranean ecosystems are prone to three soil moisture regimes during the yearly cycle: they are vulnerable to hot and dry conditions from May to July, to cold and dry conditions from August to October, and to cold conditions from November to April, illustrating the shift from a soil-moisture-limited regime in summer to an energy-limited regime in winter. In late spring, a month with significant vulnerability to hot conditions only often precedes the next stage of vulnerability to both hot and dry conditions, suggesting that high temperatures lead to critically low soil moisture levels with a certain time lag. In the eastern Mediterranean, the period of vulnerability to hot and dry conditions within the year is much longer than in the western Mediterranean. Our results show that it is crucial to account for both spatial and temporal variability to adequately assess ecosystem vulnerability. The seasonal vulnerability approach presented in this study helps to provide detailed insights regarding the specific phenological stage of the year in which ecosystem vulnerability to a certain climatic condition occurs. How to cite. Vogel, J., Paton, E., and Aich, V.: Seasonal ecosystem vulnerability to climatic anomalies in the Mediterranean, Biogeosciences, 18, 5903–5927, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-5903-2021, 2021. Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-5903-2021 SN - 1726-4189 VL - 18 SP - 5903 EP - 5927 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ET - 22 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Vogel, Johannes A1 - Rivoire, Pauline A1 - Deidda, Cristina A1 - Rahimi, Leila A1 - Sauter, Christoph A. A1 - Tschumi, Elisabeth A1 - van der Wiel, Karin A1 - Zhang, Tianyi A1 - Zscheischler, Jakob T1 - Identifying meteorological drivers of extreme impacts BT - an application to simulated crop yields JF - Earth System Dynamics N2 - Compound weather events may lead to extreme impacts that can affect many aspects of society including agriculture. Identifying the underlying mechanisms that cause extreme impacts, such as crop failure, is of crucial importance to improve their understanding and forecasting. In this study, we investigate whether key meteorological drivers of extreme impacts can be identified using the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) in a model environment, a method that allows for automated variable selection and is able to handle collinearity between variables. As an example of an extreme impact, we investigate crop failure using annual wheat yield as simulated by the Agricultural Production Systems sIMulator (APSIM) crop model driven by 1600 years of daily weather data from a global climate model (EC-Earth) under present-day conditions for the Northern Hemisphere. We then apply LASSO logistic regression to determine which weather conditions during the growing season lead to crop failure. We obtain good model performance in central Europe and the eastern half of the United States, while crop failure years in regions in Asia and the western half of the United States are less accurately predicted. Model performance correlates strongly with annual mean and variability of crop yields; that is, model performance is highest in regions with relatively large annual crop yield mean and variability. Overall, for nearly all grid points, the inclusion of temperature, precipitation and vapour pressure deficit is key to predict crop failure. In addition, meteorological predictors during all seasons are required for a good prediction. These results illustrate the omnipresence of compounding effects of both meteorological drivers and different periods of the growing season for creating crop failure events. Especially vapour pressure deficit and climate extreme indicators such as diurnal temperature range and the number of frost days are selected by the statistical model as relevant predictors for crop failure at most grid points, underlining their overarching relevance. We conclude that the LASSO regression model is a useful tool to automatically detect compound drivers of extreme impacts and could be applied to other weather impacts such as wildfires or floods. As the detected relationships are of purely correlative nature, more detailed analyses are required to establish the causal structure between drivers and impacts. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-12-151-2021 SN - 2190-4987 SN - 2190-4979 VL - 12 SP - 151 EP - 172 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Skålevåg, Amalie A1 - Vormoor, Klaus Josef T1 - Daily streamflow trends in Western versus Eastern Norway and their attribution to hydro-meteorological drivers JF - Hydrological processes : an international journal N2 - Regional warming and modifications in precipitation regimes has large impacts on streamflow in Norway, where both rainfall and snowmelt are important runoff generating processes. Hydrological impacts of recent changes in climate are usually investigated by trend analyses applied on annual, seasonal, or monthly time series. None of these detect sub-seasonal changes and their underlying causes. This study investigated sub-seasonal changes in streamflow, rainfall, and snowmelt in 61 and 51 catchments respectively in Western (Vestlandet) and Eastern (ostlandet) Norway by applying the Mann-Kendall test and Theil-Sen estimator on 10-day moving averaged daily time series over a 30-year period (1983-2012). The relative contribution of rainfall versus snowmelt to daily streamflow and the changes therein have also been estimated to identify the changing relevance of these driving processes over the same period. Detected changes in 10-day moving averaged daily streamflow were finally attributed to changes in the most important hydro-meteorological drivers using multiple-regression models with increasing complexity. Earlier spring flow timing in both regions occur due to earlier snowmelt. ostlandet shows increased summer streamflow in catchments up to 1100 m a.s.l. and slightly increased winter streamflow in about 50% of the catchments. Trend patterns in Vestlandet are less coherent. The importance of rainfall has increased in both regions. Attribution of trends reveals that changes in rainfall and snowmelt can explain some streamflow changes where they are dominant processes (e.g., spring snowmelt in ostlandet and autumn rainfall in Vestlandet). Overall, the detected streamflow changes can be best explained by adding temperature trends as an additional predictor, indicating the relevance of additional driving processes such as increased glacier melt and evapotranspiration. KW - attribution KW - climate change KW - hydrological change KW - hydro-meteorological KW - driver KW - streamflow trend KW - trend analysis Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.14329 SN - 0885-6087 SN - 1099-1085 VL - 35 IS - 8 PB - Wiley CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Natho, Stephanie T1 - How Flood Hazard Maps Improve the Understanding of Ecologically Active Floodplains JF - Water / Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) N2 - Floodplains are threatened ecosystems and are not only ecologically meaningful but also important for humans by creating multiple benefits. Many underlying functions, like nutrient retention, carbon sequestration or water regulation, strongly depend on regular inundation. So far, these are approached on the basis of what are called ‘active floodplains’. Active floodplains, defined as statistically inundated once every 100 years, represent less than 10% of a floodplain’s original size. Still, should this remaining area be considered as one homogenous surface in terms of floodplain function, or are there any alternative approaches to quantify ecologically active floodplains? With the European Flood Hazard Maps, the extent of not only medium floods (T-medium) but also frequent floods (T-frequent) needs to be modelled by all member states of the European Union. For large German rivers, both scenarios were compared to quantify the extent, as well as selected indicators for naturalness derived from inundation. It is assumed that the more naturalness there is, the more inundation and the better the functioning. Real inundation was quantified using measured discharges from relevant gauges over the past 20 years. As a result, land uses indicating strong human impacts changed significantly from T-frequent to T-medium floodplains. Furthermore, the extent, water depth and water volume stored in the T-frequent and T-medium floodplains is significantly different. Even T-frequent floodplains experienced inundation for only half of the considered gauges during the past 20 years. This study gives evidence for considering regulation functions on the basis of ecologically active floodplains, meaning in floodplains with more frequent inundation that T-medium floodplains delineate. KW - active floodplain KW - frequent flood KW - flood hazard map KW - inundation KW - land use Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/w13070937 SN - 2073-4441 VL - 13 IS - 7 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - GEN A1 - Vogel, Johannes A1 - Rivoire, Pauline A1 - Deidda, Cristina A1 - Rahimi, Leila A1 - Sauter, Christoph A. A1 - Tschumi, Elisabeth A1 - van der Wiel, Karin A1 - Zhang, Tianyi A1 - Zscheischler, Jakob T1 - Identifying meteorological drivers of extreme impacts BT - an application to simulated crop yields T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Compound weather events may lead to extreme impacts that can affect many aspects of society including agriculture. Identifying the underlying mechanisms that cause extreme impacts, such as crop failure, is of crucial importance to improve their understanding and forecasting. In this study, we investigate whether key meteorological drivers of extreme impacts can be identified using the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) in a model environment, a method that allows for automated variable selection and is able to handle collinearity between variables. As an example of an extreme impact, we investigate crop failure using annual wheat yield as simulated by the Agricultural Production Systems sIMulator (APSIM) crop model driven by 1600 years of daily weather data from a global climate model (EC-Earth) under present-day conditions for the Northern Hemisphere. We then apply LASSO logistic regression to determine which weather conditions during the growing season lead to crop failure. We obtain good model performance in central Europe and the eastern half of the United States, while crop failure years in regions in Asia and the western half of the United States are less accurately predicted. Model performance correlates strongly with annual mean and variability of crop yields; that is, model performance is highest in regions with relatively large annual crop yield mean and variability. Overall, for nearly all grid points, the inclusion of temperature, precipitation and vapour pressure deficit is key to predict crop failure. In addition, meteorological predictors during all seasons are required for a good prediction. These results illustrate the omnipresence of compounding effects of both meteorological drivers and different periods of the growing season for creating crop failure events. Especially vapour pressure deficit and climate extreme indicators such as diurnal temperature range and the number of frost days are selected by the statistical model as relevant predictors for crop failure at most grid points, underlining their overarching relevance. We conclude that the LASSO regression model is a useful tool to automatically detect compound drivers of extreme impacts and could be applied to other weather impacts such as wildfires or floods. As the detected relationships are of purely correlative nature, more detailed analyses are required to establish the causal structure between drivers and impacts. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1126 Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-496273 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1126 SP - 151 EP - 172 ER - TY - THES A1 - Ayzel, Georgy T1 - Advancing radar-based precipitation nowcasting T1 - Fortschritte bei der radarbasierten Niederschlagsvorhersage BT - an open benchmark and the potential of deep learning BT - ein offener Benchmark und das Potenzial von Deep Learning N2 - Precipitation forecasting has an important place in everyday life – during the day we may have tens of small talks discussing the likelihood that it will rain this evening or weekend. Should you take an umbrella for a walk? Or should you invite your friends for a barbecue? It will certainly depend on what your weather application shows. While for years people were guided by the precipitation forecasts issued for a particular region or city several times a day, the widespread availability of weather radars allowed us to obtain forecasts at much higher spatiotemporal resolution of minutes in time and hundreds of meters in space. Hence, radar-based precipitation nowcasting, that is, very-short-range forecasting (typically up to 1–3 h), has become an essential technique, also in various professional application contexts, e.g., early warning, sewage control, or agriculture. There are two major components comprising a system for precipitation nowcasting: radar-based precipitation estimates, and models to extrapolate that precipitation to the imminent future. While acknowledging the fundamental importance of radar-based precipitation retrieval for precipitation nowcasts, this thesis focuses only on the model development: the establishment of open and competitive benchmark models, the investigation of the potential of deep learning, and the development of procedures for nowcast errors diagnosis and isolation that can guide model development. The present landscape of computational models for precipitation nowcasting still struggles with the availability of open software implementations that could serve as benchmarks for measuring progress. Focusing on this gap, we have developed and extensively benchmarked a stack of models based on different optical flow algorithms for the tracking step and a set of parsimonious extrapolation procedures based on image warping and advection. We demonstrate that these models provide skillful predictions comparable with or even superior to state-of-the-art operational software. We distribute the corresponding set of models as a software library, rainymotion, which is written in the Python programming language and openly available at GitHub (https://github.com/hydrogo/rainymotion). That way, the library acts as a tool for providing fast, open, and transparent solutions that could serve as a benchmark for further model development and hypothesis testing. One of the promising directions for model development is to challenge the potential of deep learning – a subfield of machine learning that refers to artificial neural networks with deep architectures, which may consist of many computational layers. Deep learning showed promising results in many fields of computer science, such as image and speech recognition, or natural language processing, where it started to dramatically outperform reference methods. The high benefit of using "big data" for training is among the main reasons for that. Hence, the emerging interest in deep learning in atmospheric sciences is also caused and concerted with the increasing availability of data – both observational and model-based. The large archives of weather radar data provide a solid basis for investigation of deep learning potential in precipitation nowcasting: one year of national 5-min composites for Germany comprises around 85 billion data points. To this aim, we present RainNet, a deep convolutional neural network for radar-based precipitation nowcasting. RainNet was trained to predict continuous precipitation intensities at a lead time of 5 min, using several years of quality-controlled weather radar composites provided by the German Weather Service (DWD). That data set covers Germany with a spatial domain of 900 km x 900 km and has a resolution of 1 km in space and 5 min in time. Independent verification experiments were carried out on 11 summer precipitation events from 2016 to 2017. In these experiments, RainNet was applied recursively in order to achieve lead times of up to 1 h. In the verification experiments, trivial Eulerian persistence and a conventional model based on optical flow served as benchmarks. The latter is available in the previously developed rainymotion library. RainNet significantly outperformed the benchmark models at all lead times up to 60 min for the routine verification metrics mean absolute error (MAE) and critical success index (CSI) at intensity thresholds of 0.125, 1, and 5 mm/h. However, rainymotion turned out to be superior in predicting the exceedance of higher intensity thresholds (here 10 and 15 mm/h). The limited ability of RainNet to predict high rainfall intensities is an undesirable property which we attribute to a high level of spatial smoothing introduced by the model. At a lead time of 5 min, an analysis of power spectral density confirmed a significant loss of spectral power at length scales of 16 km and below. Obviously, RainNet had learned an optimal level of smoothing to produce a nowcast at 5 min lead time. In that sense, the loss of spectral power at small scales is informative, too, as it reflects the limits of predictability as a function of spatial scale. Beyond the lead time of 5 min, however, the increasing level of smoothing is a mere artifact – an analogue to numerical diffusion – that is not a property of RainNet itself but of its recursive application. In the context of early warning, the smoothing is particularly unfavorable since pronounced features of intense precipitation tend to get lost over longer lead times. Hence, we propose several options to address this issue in prospective research on model development for precipitation nowcasting, including an adjustment of the loss function for model training, model training for longer lead times, and the prediction of threshold exceedance. The model development together with the verification experiments for both conventional and deep learning model predictions also revealed the need to better understand the source of forecast errors. Understanding the dominant sources of error in specific situations should help in guiding further model improvement. The total error of a precipitation nowcast consists of an error in the predicted location of a precipitation feature and an error in the change of precipitation intensity over lead time. So far, verification measures did not allow to isolate the location error, making it difficult to specifically improve nowcast models with regard to location prediction. To fill this gap, we introduced a framework to directly quantify the location error. To that end, we detect and track scale-invariant precipitation features (corners) in radar images. We then consider these observed tracks as the true reference in order to evaluate the performance (or, inversely, the error) of any model that aims to predict the future location of a precipitation feature. Hence, the location error of a forecast at any lead time ahead of the forecast time corresponds to the Euclidean distance between the observed and the predicted feature location at the corresponding lead time. Based on this framework, we carried out a benchmarking case study using one year worth of weather radar composites of the DWD. We evaluated the performance of four extrapolation models, two of which are based on the linear extrapolation of corner motion; and the remaining two are based on the Dense Inverse Search (DIS) method: motion vectors obtained from DIS are used to predict feature locations by linear and Semi-Lagrangian extrapolation. For all competing models, the mean location error exceeds a distance of 5 km after 60 min, and 10 km after 110 min. At least 25% of all forecasts exceed an error of 5 km after 50 min, and of 10 km after 90 min. Even for the best models in our experiment, at least 5 percent of the forecasts will have a location error of more than 10 km after 45 min. When we relate such errors to application scenarios that are typically suggested for precipitation nowcasting, e.g., early warning, it becomes obvious that location errors matter: the order of magnitude of these errors is about the same as the typical extent of a convective cell. Hence, the uncertainty of precipitation nowcasts at such length scales – just as a result of locational errors – can be substantial already at lead times of less than 1 h. Being able to quantify the location error should hence guide any model development that is targeted towards its minimization. To that aim, we also consider the high potential of using deep learning architectures specific to the assimilation of sequential (track) data. Last but not least, the thesis demonstrates the benefits of a general movement towards open science for model development in the field of precipitation nowcasting. All the presented models and frameworks are distributed as open repositories, thus enhancing transparency and reproducibility of the methodological approach. Furthermore, they are readily available to be used for further research studies, as well as for practical applications. N2 - Niederschlagsvorhersagen haben einen wichtigen Platz in unserem täglichen Leben. Und die breite Abdeckung mit Niederschlagsradaren ermöglicht es uns, den Niederschlag mit einer viel höheren räumlich-zeitlichen Auflösung vorherzusagen (Minuten in der Zeit, Hunderte von Metern im Raum). Solche radargestützten Niederschlagsvorhersagen mit sehr kurzem Vorhersagehorizont (1–3 Stunden) nennt man auch "Niederschlagsnowcasting." Sie sind in verschiedenen Anwendungsbereichen (z.B. in der Frühwarnung, der Stadtentwässerung sowie in der Landwirtschaft) zu einer wichtigen Technologie geworden. Eine erhebliche Schwierigkeit in Modellentwicklung zum Niederschlagsnowcastings ist jedoch die Verfügbarkeit offener Softwarewerkzeuge und Implementierungen, die als Benchmark für den Entwicklungsfortschritt auf diesem Gebiet dienen können. Um diese Lücke zu schließen, haben wir eine Gruppe von Modellen auf der Grundlage verschiedener Tracking- und Extrapolationsverfahren entwickelt und systematisch verglichen. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Vorhersagen dieser einen Skill haben, der sich mit dem Skill operationeller Vorhersagesysteme messen kann, teils sogar überlegen sind. Diese Benchmark-Modelle sind nun in Form der quelloffenen Software-Bibliothek rainymotion allgemein verfügbar (https://github.com/hydrogo/rainymotion). Eine der vielversprechenden Perspektiven für die weitere Modellentwicklung besteht in der Untersuchung des Potenzials von "Deep Learning" – einem Teilgebiet des maschinellen Lernens, das sich auf künstliche neuronale Netze mit sog. "tiefen Architekturen" bezieht, die aus einer Vielzahl von Schichten (computational layers) bestehen können. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde daher RainNet entwickelt: ein Tiefes Neuronales Netz für radargestütztes Niederschlags-Nowcasting. RainNet wurde zunächst zur Vorhersage der Niederschlagsintensität mit einem Vorhersagehorizont von fünf Minuten trainiert. Als Datengrundlage dazu dienten mehrere Jahre qualitätskontrollierter Radarkompositprodukte des Deutschen Wetterdienstes (DWD). RainNet übertraf die verfügbaren Benchmark-Modelle für Vorhersagezeiten bis zu 60 min in Bezug auf den Mittleren Absoluten Fehler (MAE) und den Critical Success Index (CSI) für Intensitätsschwellenwerte von 0.125, 1 und 5 mm/h. Allerdings erwies sich das das Benchmark-Modell aus dem Softwarepaket rainymotion bei der Vorhersage der Überschreitung höherer Intensitätsschwellen (10 und 15 mm/h) als überlegen. Die eingeschränkte Fähigkeit von RainNet zur Vorhersage hoher Niederschlagsintensitäten ist eine unerwünschte Eigenschaft, die wir auf ein hohes Maß an räumlicher Glättung durch das Modell zurückführen. Im Kontext der Frühwarnung ist die Glättung besonders ungünstig, da ausgeprägte Merkmale von Starkniederschlägen bei längeren Vorlaufzeiten tendenziell verloren gehen. In dieser Arbeit werden daher mehrere Optionen vorgeschlagen, um dieses Problem in der zukünftigen Forschung zur Modellentwicklung anzugehen. Ein weiterer Beitrag dieser Arbeit liegt in der Quantifizierung einer spezifischen Fehlerquelle von Niederschlagsnowcasts. Der Gesamtfehler eines Nowcasts besteht aus einem Fehler in der vorhergesagten Lage eines Niederschlagsfeatures (Ortsfehler) sowie einem Fehler in der Änderung der Intensität eines Features über die Vorhersagezeit (Intensitätsfehler). Herkömmliche Verifikationsmaße waren bislang nicht in der Lage, das Ausmaß des Ortsfehlers zu isolieren. Um diese Lücke zu füllen, haben wir einen Ansatz zur direkten Quantifizierung des Ortsfehlers entwickelt. Mit Hilfe dieses Ansatzes wurde wir Benchmarking-Experiment auf Grundlage eines fünfminütigen DWD Radarkompositprodukts für das komplette Jahr 2016 umgesetzt. In diesem Experiment wurden vier Nowcasting-Modelle aus der rainymotion-Softwarebibliothek verwendet im Hinblick auf den Ortsfehler der Vorhersage verglichen. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass für alle konkurrierenden Modelle die Ortsfehler von Bedeutung sind: die Größenordnung dieser Fehler entspricht etwa der typischen Ausdehnung einer konvektiven Zelle oder einer mittelgroßen Stadt (5–10 km). Insgesamt zeigt diese Arbeit die Vorteile eines "Open Science"-Ansatzes für die Modellentwicklung im Bereich der Niederschlagsnowcastings. Alle vorgestellten Modelle und Modellsysteme stehen als offene, gut dokumentierte Repositorien zusammen mit entsprechenden offenen Datensätzen öffentlich zu Verfügung für, was die Transparenz und Reproduzierbarkeit des methodischen Ansatzes, aber auch die Anwendbarkeit in der Praxis erhöht. KW - Weather radar KW - nowcasting KW - optical flow KW - deep learning KW - Wetterradar KW - Deep Learning KW - Nowcasting KW - Optischer Fluss Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-504267 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Reich, Marvin A1 - Mikolaj, Michal A1 - Blume, Theresa A1 - Güntner, Andreas T1 - Field-scale subsurface flow processes inferred from continuous gravity monitoring during a sprinkling experiment JF - Water resources research : WRR / American Geophysical Union N2 - Field-scale subsurface flow processes are difficult to observe and monitor. We investigated the value of gravity time series to identify subsurface flow processes by carrying out a sprinkling experiment in the direct vicinity of a superconducting gravimeter. We demonstrate how different water mass distributions in the subsoil affect the gravity signal and show the benefit of using the shape of the gravity response curve to identify different subsurface flow processes. For this purpose, a simple hydro-gravimetric model was set up to test different scenarios in an optimization approach, including the processes macropore flow, preferential flow, wetting front advancement (WFA), bypass flow and perched water table rise. Besides the gravity observations, electrical resistivity and soil moisture data were used for evaluation. For the study site, the process combination of preferential flow and WFA led to the best correspondence to the observations in a multi-criteria assessment. We argue that the approach of combining field-scale sprinkling experiments in combination with gravity monitoring can be transferred to other sites for process identification, and discuss related uncertainties including limitations of the simple model used here. The study stresses the value of advancing terrestrial gravimetry as an integrative and non-invasive monitoring technique for assessing hydrological states and dynamics. KW - Hydrogravimetry Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2021WR030044 SN - 0043-1397 SN - 1944-7973 VL - 57 IS - 10 PB - Wiley CY - New York ER -