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Towards predictive data-driven simulations of wildfire spread - Part I: Reduced-cost ensemble Kalman filter based on a polynomial chaos surrogate model for parameter estimation

  • M. C. Rochoux
  • , S. Ricci
  • , D. Lucor
  • , B. Cuenot
  • , A. Trouvé
  • CERFACS
  • SUC/CNRS-URA1875
  • Ecole Centrale Paris
  • Grande Voie des Vignes
  • University of Maryland

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper is the first part in a series of two articles and presents a data-driven wildfire simulator for forecasting wildfire spread scenarios, at a reduced computational cost that is consistent with operational systems. The prototype simulator features the following components: an Eulerian front propagation solver FIREFLY that adopts a regionalscale modeling viewpoint, treats wildfires as surface propagating fronts, and uses a description of the local rate of fire spread (ROS) as a function of environmental conditions based on Rothermel's model; a series of airborne-like observations of the fire front positions; and a data assimilation (DA) algorithm based on an ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) for parameter estimation. This stochastic algorithm partly accounts for the nonlinearities between the input parameters of the semi-empirical ROS model and the fire front position, and is sequentially applied to provide a spatially uniform correction to wind and biomass fuel parameters as observations become available. A wildfire spread simulator combined with an ensemble-based DA algorithm is therefore a promising approach to reduce uncertainties in the forecast position of the fire front and to introduce a paradigm-shift in the wildfire emergency response. In order to reduce the computational cost of the EnKF algorithm, a surrogate model based on a polynomial chaos (PC) expansion is used in place of the forward model FIREFLY in the resulting hybrid PCEnKF algorithm. The performance of EnKF and PC-EnKF is assessed on synthetically generated simple configurations of fire spread to provide valuable information and insight on the benefits of the PC-EnKF approach, as well as on a controlled grassland fire experiment. The results indicate that the proposed PC-EnKF algorithm features similar performance to the standard EnKF algorithm, but at a much reduced computational cost. In particular, the re-analysis and forecast skills of DA strongly relate to the spatial and temporal variability of the errors in the ROS model parameters.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2951-2973
Number of pages23
JournalNatural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Volume14
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Nov 2014

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