Title: Introduction to Weather Forecasting
1 Introduction to Weather Forecasting
Cliff Mass Department of Atmospheric
Sciences University of Washington
2 The Stone Age
- Prior to approximately 1955, weather forecasting
was basically a subjective art, and not very
skillful. - The technology of forecasting was basically
subjective extrapolation of weather systems, in
the latter years using the upper level flow (the
jet stream). - Local weather detailswhich really werent
understood-- were added subjectively.
3Upper Level Chart
4The Development of Numerical Weather Prediction
(NWP)
- Vilhelm Bjerknes in his landmark paper of 1904
suggested that NWP--objective weather
prediction-- was possible. - A closed set of equations existed that could
predict the future atmosphere - But it wasnt practical then because there was no
reasonable way to do the computations and a
sufficient 3-D description of the atmosphere did
not exist.
5Numerical Weather Prediction
- One such equation is Newtons Second Law
- F ma
- Force mass x acceleration
- Mass is the amount of matter
- Acceleration is how velocity changes with time
- Force is a push or pull on some object (e.g.,
gravitational force, pressure forces, friction)
Using observations we can determine the mass and
forces, and thus can calculate the
acceleration--giving the future
6NWP Becomes Possible
- By the 1940s an extensive upper air network was
in place, plus many more surface observations.
Thus, a reasonable 3-D description of the
atmosphere was possible. - By the mid to late 1940s, digital programmable
computers were becoming availablethe first..the
ENIAC
7The Eniac
81955-1965 The Advent of Modern Forecasting
- Numerical weather prediction became the
cornerstone. - New observing technologies also had a huge
impact - Weather satellites
- Weather radar
9Satellite and Weather Radars Provides a More
Comprehensive View of the Atmosphere
10Camano Island Weather Radar
11Weather Prediction Steps
- Data collection and quality control
- Data assimilation creating a physically
realistic 3-D description of the atmosphere
called the initialization. - Model integration. Solving the equations to
produce future 3D descriptions of the atmosphere - Model output post-processing using statistical
methods - Dissemination and communication
12Initialization
Using a wide range of weather observations we can
create a three-dimensional description of the
atmosphere
13Numerical Weather Prediction
- The observations are interpolated to a 3-D grid
where they are integrated into the future using a
computer model--the collection of equations and a
method for solving them. - As computer speed increased, the number of grid
points could be increased. - More (and thus) closer grid points means we can
simulate (forecast) smaller and smaller scale
features. We call this improved resolution.
14Model Postprocessing in the U.S. Model Output
Statistics (MOS)
- Main post-processing approach used by the
National Weather Service - Based on linear regression Ya0 a1X1 a2X2
a3X3 - MOS is available for many parameters and time and
greatly improves the quality of most model
predictions.
15Prob. Of Precip. Cool Season(0000/1200 UTC
Cycles Combined)
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17Major Improvement
- Weather forecasting skill has substantially
improved over the last 50 years. Really.
18Forecast Skill Improvement
National Weather Service
Forecast Error
Better
Year
19Why Large Improvement in Weather Forecast Skill?
- As computers became faster, were able to solve
the equations at higher resolution - Improved physics
- New observational assets allowed a better
initialization
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24A More Basic Problem
- There is fundamental uncertainty in weather
forecasts that can not be ignored. - This uncertainty has a number of causes
- Uncertainty in initialization
- Uncertainty in model physics
- Uncertainties in how we solve the equations
- Insufficient resolution to properly model
atmospheric features.
25The Atmospheric is Chaotic
- The work of Lorenz (1963, 1965, 1968)
demonstrated that the atmosphere is a chaotic
system, in which small differences in the
initializationwell within observational error
can have large impacts on the forecasts,
particularly for longer forecasts. - Not unlike a pinball game.
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27Probabilistic Prediction
- Thus, forecasts must be provided in a
probabilistic framework, not the deterministic
single answer approach that has dominated weather
prediction during the last century. - Interestinglythe first public forecasts were
probabilistic
28Ol Probs
Cleveland Abbe (Ol Probabilities), who led the
establishment of a weather forecasting division
within the U.S. Army Signal Corps. Produced the
first known communication of a weather
probability to users and the public in 1869.
Professor Cleveland Abbe, who issued the first
public Weather Synopsis and Probabilities on
February 19, 1871
29Ensemble Prediction
- The most prevalent approach for producing
probabilistic forecasts and uncertainty
informationensemble prediction. - Instead of making one forecastmake manyeach
with a slightly different initialization or
varied model physics. - Possible to do now with the vastly greater
computation resources that are now available.
30Verification
The Thanksgiving Forecast 2001 42h forecast
(valid Thu 10AM)
SLP and winds
- Reveals high uncertainty in storm track and
intensity - Indicates low probability of Puget Sound wind
event
1 cent
11 ngps
5 ngps
8 eta
2 eta
3 ukmo
12 cmcg
9 ukmo
6 cmcg
4 tcwb
13 avn
10 tcwb
7 avn
31Ensemble Prediction
- Can use ensembles to provide a new generation of
products that give the probabilities that some
weather feature will occur. - Can also predict forecast skill.
- It appears that when forecasts are similar,
forecast skill is higher. - When forecasts differ greatly, forecast skill is
less.
32Ensemble-Based Probabilistic Products
33Ensemble Post-Processing
- To get the maximum benefits from ensembles,
post-processing is needed, such as - Correction for systematic bias
- Optimal weighting of the various ensemble
members--e.g., Bayesian Model Averaging
34The UW-MURI Project
- Possibility the most advanced ensemble/postprocess
ing system in the world has been developed at the
UW - Includes UW Atmospheric Sciences, Statistics,
Psychology, and Applied Physics Lab - Remaining talks will describe some of the
research and development completed by this effort.
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36Providing forecast uncertainty information is
good.
But you can have too much of a good thing
37The END