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Dive into the research topics where Kelly M. Mahoney is active.

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Featured researches published by Kelly M. Mahoney.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

The Great Colorado Flood of September 2013

David J. Gochis; Russ S. Schumacher; Katja Friedrich; Nolan J. Doesken; Matt Kelsch; Juanzhen Sun; Kyoko Ikeda; Daniel T. Lindsey; Andrew W. Wood; Brenda Dolan; Sergey Y. Matrosov; Andrew J. Newman; Kelly M. Mahoney; Steven A. Rutledge; Richard H. Johnson; Paul A. Kucera; P. C. Kennedy; Daniel Sempere-Torres; Matthias Steiner; Rita D. Roberts; James W. Wilson; Wei Yu; V. Chandrasekar; Roy Rasmussen; Amanda Anderson; Barbara G. Brown

AbstractDuring the second week of September 2013, a seasonally uncharacteristic weather pattern stalled over the Rocky Mountain Front Range region of northern Colorado bringing with it copious amounts of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, and the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean. This feed of moisture was funneled toward the east-facing mountain slopes through a series of mesoscale circulation features, resulting in several days of unusually widespread heavy rainfall over steep mountainous terrain. Catastrophic flooding ensued within several Front Range river systems that washed away highways, destroyed towns, isolated communities, necessitated days of airborne evacuations, and resulted in eight fatalities. The impacts from heavy rainfall and flooding were felt over a broad region of northern Colorado leading to 18 counties being designated as federal disaster areas and resulting in damages exceeding


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2013

The Landfall and Inland Penetration of a Flood-Producing Atmospheric River in Arizona. Part I: Observed Synoptic-Scale, Orographic, and Hydrometeorological Characteristics

Paul J. Neiman; F. Martin Ralph; Benjamin J. Moore; Mimi Hughes; Kelly M. Mahoney; Jason M. Cordeira; Michael D. Dettinger

2 billion (U.S. dollars). This study explores the meteorological and hydrological ingredients...


Journal of Climate | 2013

High-Resolution Downscaled Simulations of Warm-Season Extreme Precipitation Events in the Colorado Front Range under Past and Future Climates*

Kelly M. Mahoney; Michael A. Alexander; James D. Scott; Joseph J. Barsugli

AbstractAtmospheric rivers (ARs) are a dominant mechanism for generating intense wintertime precipitation along the U.S. West Coast. While studies over the past 10 years have explored the impact of ARs in, and west of, California’s Sierra Nevada and the Pacific Northwest’s Cascade Mountains, their influence on the weather across the intermountain west remains an open question. This study utilizes gridded atmospheric datasets, satellite imagery, rawinsonde soundings, a 449-MHz wind profiler and global positioning system (GPS) receiver, and operational hydrometeorological observing networks to explore the dynamics and inland impacts of a landfalling, flood-producing AR across Arizona in January 2010. Plan-view, cross-section, and back-trajectory analyses quantify the synoptic and mesoscale forcing that led to widespread precipitation across the state. The analyses show that a strong AR formed in the lower midlatitudes over the northeastern Pacific Ocean via frontogenetic processes and sea surface latent-hea...


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2014

The Landfall and Inland Penetration of a Flood-Producing Atmospheric River in Arizona. Part II: Sensitivity of Modeled Precipitation to Terrain Height and Atmospheric River Orientation

Mimi Hughes; Kelly M. Mahoney; Paul J. Neiman; Benjamin J. Moore; Michael A. Alexander; F. Martin Ralph

AbstractA high-resolution case-based approach for dynamically downscaling climate model data is presented. Extreme precipitation events are selected from regional climate model (RCM) simulations of past and future time periods. Each event is further downscaled using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model to storm scale (1.3-km grid spacing). The high-resolution downscaled simulations are used to investigate changes in extreme precipitation projections from a past to a future climate period, as well as how projected precipitation intensity and distribution differ between the RCM scale (50-km grid spacing) and the local scale (1.3-km grid spacing). Three independent RCM projections are utilized as initial and boundary conditions to the downscaled simulations, and the results reveal considerable spread in projected changes not only among the RCMs but also in the downscaled high-resolution simulations. However, even when the RCM projections show an overall (i.e., spatially averaged) decrease in the ...


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2015

Moisture Pathways into the U.S. Intermountain West Associated with Heavy Winter Precipitation Events

Michael A. Alexander; James D. Scott; Dustin Swales; Mimi Hughes; Kelly M. Mahoney; Catherine A. Smith

AbstractThis manuscript documents numerical modeling experiments based on a January 2010 atmospheric river (AR) event that caused extreme precipitation in Arizona. The control experiment (CNTL), using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model with 3-km grid spacing, agrees well with observations. Sensitivity experiments in which 1) model grid spacing decreases sequentially from 81 to 3 km and 2) upstream terrain is elevated are used to assess the sensitivity of interior precipitation amounts and horizontal water vapor fluxes to model grid resolution and height of Baja California terrain. The drying ratio, a measure of airmass drying after passage across terrain, increases with Baja’s terrain height and decreases with coarsened grid spacing. Subsequently, precipitation across Arizona decreases as the Baja terrain height increases, although it changes little with coarsened grid spacing. Northern Baja’s drying ratio is much larger than that of southern Baja. Thus, ARs with a southerly orientation, wit...


Monthly Weather Review | 2015

Climatology and Environmental Characteristics of Extreme Precipitation Events in the Southeastern United States

Benjamin J. Moore; Kelly M. Mahoney; Ellen M. Sukovich; Robert Cifelli; Thomas M. Hamill

AbstractTwo methods were used to identify the paths of moisture transport that reach the U.S. Intermountain West (IMW) during heavy precipitation events in winter. In the first, the top 150 precipitation events at stations located within six regions in the IMW were identified, and then back trajectories were initiated at 6-h intervals on those days at the four Climate Forecast System Reanalysis grid points nearest the stations. The second method identified the leading patterns of integrated water vapor transport (IVT) using the three leading empirical orthogonal functions of IVT over land that were first normalized by the local standard deviation. The top 1% of the associated 6-hourly time series was used to construct composites of IVT, atmospheric circulation, and precipitation. The results from both methods indicate that moisture originating from the Pacific that leads to extreme precipitation in the IMW during winter takes distinct pathways and is influenced by gaps in the Cascades (Oregon–Washington),...


Monthly Weather Review | 2016

Understanding the Role of Atmospheric Rivers in Heavy Precipitation in the Southeast United States

Kelly M. Mahoney; Darren L. Jackson; Paul J. Neiman; Mimi Hughes; Lisa S. Darby; Gary A. Wick; Allen B. White; Ellen M. Sukovich; Rob Cifelli

AbstractThis paper documents the characteristics of extreme precipitation events (EPEs) in the southeastern United States (SEUS) during 2002–11. The EPEs are identified by applying an object-based method to 24-h precipitation analyses from the NCEP stage-IV dataset. It is found that EPEs affected the SEUS in all months and occurred most frequently in the western portion of the SEUS during the cool season and in the eastern portion during the warm season. The EPEs associated with tropical cyclones, although less common, tended to be larger in size, more intense, and longer lived than “nontropical” EPEs. Nontropical EPEs in the warm season, relative to those in the cool season, tended to be smaller in size and typically involved more moist, conditionally unstable conditions but weaker dynamical influences. Synoptic-scale composites are constructed for nontropical EPEs stratified by the magnitude of vertically integrated water vapor transport (IVT) to examine distinct scenarios for the occurrence of EPEs. Th...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

Improving Flash Flood Forecasts: The HMT-WPC Flash Flood and Intense Rainfall Experiment

Faye E. Barthold; Thomas E. Workoff; Brian A. Cosgrove; Jonathan J. Gourley; David R. Novak; Kelly M. Mahoney

AbstractAn analysis of atmospheric rivers (ARs) as defined by an automated AR detection tool based on integrated water vapor transport (IVT) and the connection to heavy precipitation in the southeast United States (SEUS) is performed. Climatological water vapor and water vapor transport fields are compared between the U.S. West Coast (WCUS) and the SEUS, highlighting stronger seasonal variation in integrated water vapor in the SEUS and stronger seasonal variation in IVT in the WCUS. The climatological analysis suggests that IVT values above ~500 kg m−1 s−1 (as incorporated into an objective identification tool such as the AR detection tool used here) may serve as a sensible threshold for defining ARs in the SEUS.Atmospheric river impacts on heavy precipitation in the SEUS are shown to vary on an annual cycle, and a connection between ARs and heavy precipitation during the nonsummer months is demonstrated. When identified ARs are matched to heavy precipitation days (>100 mm day−1), an average match rate of...


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2015

Climatology of Extreme Daily Precipitation in Colorado and Its Diverse Spatial and Seasonal Variability

Kelly M. Mahoney; F. Martin Ralph; Klaus Wolter; Nolan J. Doesken; Michael D. Dettinger; Daniel J. Gottas; Timothy Coleman; Allen B. White

AbstractDespite advancements in numerical modeling and the increasing prevalence of convection-allowing guidance, flash flood forecasting remains a substantial challenge. Accurate flash flood forecasts depend not only on accurate quantitative precipitation forecasts (QPFs), but also on an understanding of the corresponding hydrologic response. To advance forecast skill, innovative guidance products that blend meteorology and hydrology are needed, as well as a comprehensive verification dataset to identify areas in need of improvement.To address these challenges, in 2013 the Hydrometeorological Testbed at the Weather Prediction Center (HMT-WPC), partnering with the National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) and the Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL), developed and hosted the inaugural Flash Flood and Intense Rainfall (FFaIR) Experiment. In its first two years, the experiment has focused on ways to combine meteorological guidance with available hydrologic information. One example of this is the creation ...


Weather and Forecasting | 2014

Verification of Quantitative Precipitation Reforecasts over the Southeastern United States

Martin A. Baxter; Gary M. Lackmann; Kelly M. Mahoney; Thomas E. Workoff; Thomas M. Hamill

The climatology of Colorado’s historical extreme precipitation events shows a remarkable degree of seasonal and regional variability. Analysis of the largest historical daily precipitation totals at COOP stations across Colorado by season indicates that the largest recorded daily precipitation totals have ranged from less than 60mmday 21 in some areas to more than 250mmday 21 in others. East of the Continental Divide, winter events are rarely among the top 10 events at a given site, but spring events dominate in and near the foothills; summer events are most common across the lower-elevation eastern plains, while fall events are most typical for the lower elevations west of the Divide. The seasonal signal in Colorado’s central mountains is complex; high-elevation intense precipitation events have occurred in all months of the year, including summer, when precipitationismore likelytobe liquid(as opposedtosnow),whichposesmore ofan instantaneousfloodrisk. Notably, the historic Colorado Front Range daily rainfall totals that contributed to the damaging floods in September 2013 occurred outside of that region’s typical season for most extreme precipitation (spring‐ summer). That event and many others highlight the fact that extreme precipitation in Colorado has occurred historically during all seasons and at all elevations, emphasizing a year-round statewide risk.

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Mimi Hughes

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Joseph J. Barsugli

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Allen B. White

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Catherine A. Smith

University of Colorado Boulder

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Ellen M. Sukovich

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Gary A. Wick

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Gary M. Lackmann

North Carolina State University

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Klaus Wolter

University of Colorado Boulder

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Michael D. Dettinger

United States Geological Survey

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