Increased activity expected at NSF NCAR Mesa Lab during Super Science Saturday on Nov. 1, 2025.

 View more information.

Quantifying uncertainties in modeling wind resource data from different PBL schemes in the WRF model: A case study over the Puerto Rico region

Yang, J., Sengupta, M., Ravi, V., Xie, Y., Shin, H. H., et al. (2026). Quantifying uncertainties in modeling wind resource data from different PBL schemes in the WRF model: A case study over the Puerto Rico region. Atmospheric Research, doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosres.2025.108341

Title Quantifying uncertainties in modeling wind resource data from different PBL schemes in the WRF model: A case study over the Puerto Rico region
Genre Article
Author(s) J. Yang, M. Sengupta, V. Ravi, Y. Xie, Hyeyum Hailey Shin, A. Habte
Abstract This study examines the modeling uncertainty of wind resource data stemming from the use of various planetary boundary layer (PBL) parameterizations available in the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. WRF-based wind simulations spanning 20 years at 3-km resolution using 11 different PBL schemes are used to objectively investigate the uncertainty in modeling wind speed for land-based wind (LBW) and offshore wind (OSW) locations in Puerto Rico. The uncertainty in the wind modeling for the 20-year dataset is quantified using the spread index (SI) and standard deviation (SD). For virtual LBW and OSW sites, the SI and SD values are analyzed as calculated across various spatial and temporal scales. Because the PBL's atmospheric stability conditions can be characterized into two dominant categories, the study focuses on analyzing the SI and SD for daytime (mainly unstable PBL conditions) and nighttime (mainly stable PBL conditions). For wind shear (10 m–200 m) at the OSW and LBW sites, WRF-based numerical experiments indicate the following SI (or SD) ranges: 39 %–94 % (0.74 m/s–1.44 m/s) during the daytime for OSW, 50 %–75 % (0.68 m/s–1.19 m/s) during the daytime for LBW, 37 %–60 % (0.73 m/s–1.12 m/s) during the nighttime for OSW, and 57 %–143 % (0.65 m/s–1.43 m/s) during the nighttime for LBW. While a high SI is observed when modeling LBW during the nighttime, there are notable modeling uncertainties during the daytime on the leeward side of the orographic barriers for Puerto Rico.
Publication Title Atmospheric Research
Publication Date Jan 1, 2026
Publisher's Version of Record https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosres.2025.108341
OpenSky Citable URL https://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7057mcw
OpenSky Listing View on OpenSky
NCAR Affiliations RAL, AAP

< Back