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Profile photo of Ronny Berndtsson

Ronny Berndtsson

Professor, Dep Director, MECW Dep Scientific Coordinator

Profile photo of Ronny Berndtsson

Identification of typical synoptic patterns causing heavy rainfall in the rainy season in Japan by a self-organizing map

Author

  • Koji Nishiyama
  • Shinichi Endo
  • Kenji Jinno
  • Cintia Bertacchi Uvo
  • Jonas Olsson
  • Ronny Berndtsson

Summary, in English

In order to systematically and visually understand well-known but qualitative and complex relationships between synoptic fields and heavy rainfall events in Kyushu Islands, southwestern Japan, during the BAIU season, these synoptic fields were classified using the Self-Organizing Map (SOM), which can convert complex non-linear features into simple two-dimensional relationships. It was assumed that the synoptic field patterns could be simply expressed by the spatial distribution of (1) wind components at the 850 hPa level and (2) precipitable water (PW) defined by the water vapor amount contained in a vertical column of the atmosphere. By the SOM algorithm and the clustering techniques of the U-matrix and the K-means, the synoptic fields could be divided into eight kinds of patterns (clusters). One of the clusters has the notable spatial features represented by a large PW content accompanied by strong wind components known as low-level jet (LLJ). The features of this cluster indicate a typical synoptic field pattern that frequently causes heavy rainfall in Kyushu during the rainy season. In addition, an independent data set was used for validating the performance of the trained SOM. The results indicated that the SOM could successfully extract heavy rainfall events related to typical synoptic field patterns of the BAIU season. Interestingly, one specific SOM unit was closely related to the occurrence of disastrous heavy rainfall events observed during both training and validation periods. From these results, the trained SOM showed good performance for identifying synoptic fields causing heavy rainfall also in the validation period. We conclude that the SOM technique may be an effective tool for classifying complicated non-linear synoptic fields and identifying heavy rainfall events to some degree.

Department/s

  • Division of Water Resources Engineering

Publishing year

2007

Language

English

Pages

185-200

Publication/Series

Atmospheric Research

Volume

83

Issue

2-4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Water Engineering

Keywords

  • Precipitable water
  • Low-level jet
  • Self-Organizing Map (SOM)
  • Clustering
  • Heavy rainfall

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1873-2895