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Title: Meteorology Weather and Climate Weather and Climate Prediction1


1
Meteorology Weather and ClimateWeather and
Climate Prediction1
  • Ruth Doherty (CREW 303)
  • Ruth.Doherty_at_ed.ac.uk

2
Lecture 3 Weather and Climate Prediction 1
  • Not in Ahrens Meteorology Today
  • Why is a forecast not accurate?
  • Measuring the accuracy and reliability of a
    forecast
  • Despite improvements why is a forecast still not
    accurate?
  • Chaos theory
  • Ensemble and seasonal forecasting
  • http//www.ecmwf.int/products/forecasts
    (/guide/ and /seasonal),
  • The Physics of Atmospheres Houghton ch13
    (JCM QC880)

ON HANDOUT
3
Modelling physical processes
  • Parametrisation approximation of physical
    process numerically
  • Parametrisations are required for physical
    processes in the atmosphere occurring on scales
    that are too small to be directly seen or
    resolved by the numerical model, typically less
    than 50km,
  • These are called sub-grid scale processes

4
Physical parameterisations
5
Dynamical Equations
  • So-called 6 primitive equations
  • Describe rates of change of u,v,T,q
  • Horizontal equations of motion -Newtons 2nd law
    or conservation of momentum
  • Thermodynamic equation- 1st Law or conservation
    of energy
  • Continuity equation- conservation of mass
  • Water vapour equation conservation of moisture
    (evaporation/condensation)
  • Relations between variables
  • The hydrostatic equation (relationship between
    the density of the air and the change of pressure
    with height)
  • Ideal gas law or equation of state
  • Equations are non-linear use finite difference
    techniques

6
Stability Condition
  • CFL criterion
  • Speed of fastest moving system in model lt grid
    spacing / time step
  • u lt ?x/ ?t
  • Fastest wind speeds 50ms-1 (110mph)
  • For ?x 60,000m
  • ?t must be lt 1200 seconds (20 minutes)

7
Types of models
  • NWP models- grid or spectral models
  • Coupled Atmosphere (NWP)-Ocean Model
  • lower resolution UK Met office model -2.5o x3.75o
    73 rows by 96 columns,19 vertical levels ?250km
    in the mid-latitudes
  • Used for seasonal forecasting
  • Used for future climate simulations with
    increasing CO2 concentrations
  • More on these models in lectures 3 and 4

ON HANDOUT
8
Conclusions
  • Numerical models solve dynamical equations on a
    model grid and need physical parametrisations to
    represent sub-grid scale physical processes
  • Computational effort in models depends on
    resolution, time step and forecast period
  • Inappropriate choices can cause instability
  • Much improved resolution over the last few
    decades

9
Why are forecasts not perfect?
  • a) The observed current state of the
    atmosphereanalysis is not known accurately
    enough
  • b) The grid size is too large for representing
    the atmosphere-parameterisations need to be used
    for sub-grid scale processes and these are not
    exact
  • c) The model equations are non-linear

ON HANDOUT
10
Inaccuracies in the analysis
  • Despite quality control and adjustments
    inaccuracies can occur in the analysis
  • Sparse or lack of data over considerable time and
    areas
  • Good data influences the analysis the wrong way-
    can happen when a weather system is only
    partially covered by observations
  • An analysis error may only lead to a forecast
    failure in a dynamically sensitive region e.g.,
    cyclone forming region

ON HANDOUT
11
Forecast and Actual
  • Forecastforecast for 600pm based on
    observations that were assimilated in the model-
    to produce an analysis (global picture of the
    current state of the atmosphere) at 1200 noon
  • Actual Analysis for 1200 noon based on
    observations assimilated into the model at noon?
    best guess for reality

12
Is this a good forecast?
  • Temperature forecast
  • Forecast Actual
    Analysis

13
Comparing forecasts statistics
  • Statistical tests compare each grid box value in
    the forecast and the actual analysis and provide
    a summary result for the whole field or map. Two
    test used are
  • Root-mean-square (rms) difference
  • This is a measure of the absolute difference
    between the forecast and the actual field or map
  • Anomaly correlation
  • This is a measure of the similarity in patterns
    across
  • the field or map, irrespective of the absolute
    difference

ON HANDOUT
14
RMS errors of surface pressure compared with
analyses from observations
  • Improvements in model dynamics and physics and
    resolution- improvement in forecast skill

15
How long are forecasts reliable for?
  • Large rms error or small anomaly correlation
    implies an unreliable forecast
  • but is it of any use at all?
  • A forecast still has some reliability if it is
    better than the
  • Persistence forecast
  • Climatology

ON HANDOUT
16
Typical forecast accuracy
Forecast error
Climatology Persistence Typical NWP
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Days into forecast
ON HANDOUT
17
Still unpredictable-chaos theory
  • The atmosphere is still unpredictable
  • Edward Lorenz, 1963 pioneer of chaos
  • Non-linear equations can be chaotic
  • The equations are exact but their solutions are
    very sensitive to the initial values
  • We can never model the atmosphere perfectly Very
    small differences between the forecast and real
    world can grow to very large errors over time
    making the forecast unreliable
  • Similarly, two slightly different forecasts for
    the same time that use the same observations but
    with slightly different observation errors can
    diverge over time
  • The physics of Atmospheres- Houghton ch 13 (JCM
    QC880)

ON HANDOUT
18
Lorenz model predictable state -little change
e.g. slow moving pressure system
  • Two points (forecasts or forecast and reality)
    stay close together

19
Lorenz model less predictable state- diverging
rapidly
e.g. deepening depression
e.g. Warm and wet
e.g. Cold and sunny
20
Lorenz model unpredictable state- massive
divergence
e.g. birth of a depression
e.g. Cold and sunny
e.g. Warm and wet
21
Forecast period spatial coverage
  • The longer the forecast period the more spatial
    information needed, since weather systems further
    away from the forecast region will influence the
    weather in the forecast region

22
Regions of sensitivity
23
Ensemble forecasts
  • We can use chaos theory to gain confidence in the
    accuracy of forecasts
  • Requires an ensemble or group of forecasts (20
    to 50)
  • Each forecast uses slightly different initial
    conditions e.g. different random errors included
  • Identify characteristic weather regimes and how
    often they occur
  • Identify regions where the forecasts diverge as
    low confidence or unlikely forecasts

ON HANDOUT
24
Example-Ensemble forecasting
25
Example-Spaghetti diagrams 500hPa Z
26
Seasonal forecasting
  • Ensemble forecasting can also be used to make
    longer term seasonal forecasts for some areas of
    the globe
  • They are probabilistic forecasts
  • But how are these meaningful if forecasts are not
    reliable past 10 days?
  • Because of atmosphere-ocean interactions. Some
    ocean processes are predictable over longer
    timescales (see later)

ON HANDOUT
27
East African Rainfall
  • UK met office forecasts of the East African short
    rains (October to December)
  • Use 40 ensembles
  • 5 categories- very wet, wet, average, dry, very
    dry
  • Most forecasts within one category of the actual
    category

ON HANDOUT
28
Conclusions
  • Numerical weather prediction is a chaotic process
  • Accuracy of forecast depends on accuracy of
    initial state
  • Since observations will always contain some
    error, there will always be a limit to
    predictability
  • Best estimate for a single forecast at present
    10 days
  • Ensemble forecasting can extend this to 2 weeks
  • Beyond two weeks forecasters mostly use ensemble
    forecasting combined with coupled ocean
    atmosphere models to make probabilistic forecasts

ON HANDOUT
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