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NATS 101 Lecture 25 Weather Forecasting I

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NATS 101 Lecture 25 Weather Forecasting I Review: ET Cyclones Ingredients for Intensification Strong Temperature Contrast Jet Stream Overhead S/W Trough to West UL ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NATS 101 Lecture 25 Weather Forecasting I


1
NATS 101Lecture 25Weather Forecasting I

2
Review ET CyclonesIngredients for
Intensification
  • Strong Temperature Contrast
  • Jet Stream Overhead
  • S/W Trough to West
  • UL Divergence over Surface Low
  • If UL Divergence exceeds LL Inflow, Cyclone
    Deepens
  • Similar Life Cycles

deepening
filling
Ahrens, Meteorology Today, 5th Ed.
3
Reasons to Forecast Weather Climate
  • Should I bring my umbrella to work today?
  • Should Miami be evacuated for a hurricane?
  • How much heating oil should a refinery process
    for the upcoming winter?
  • Will the average temperature change if CO2 levels
    double during the next 100 years?
  • How much to charge for flood insurance?
  • How much water will be available for agriculture
    population in 30 years
  • These questions require weather-climate forecasts
    for today, a few days, months, years, decades

4
Forecasting Questions
  • How are weather forecasts made?
  • How accurate are current weather forecasts?
  • How accurate can weather forecasts be?
  • We will emphasize mid-latitude forecasts out to
    15 days where most progress has been made.

5
Types of Forecasts
  • Persistence - forecast the future atmospheric
    state to be the same as current state
  • -Raining today, so forecast rain tomorrow
  • -Useful for few hours to couple days

6
Types of Forecasts
  • Trend - add past change to current condition to
    obtain forecast for the future state
  • -Useful for few hours to couple days

10 am 11 am 12 pm
59? F 63? F 67? F
Past Now Future
7
Types of Forecasts
  • Analog - find past state that is most similar to
    current state, then forecast same evolution
  • -Difficulty is that no two states exactly alike
  • -Useful for forecasts up to one or two days

8
Types of Forecasts
  • Climatology - forecast future state to be same as
    climatology or average of past weather for date
  • -Forecast July 4th MAX for Tucson to be 100 F
  • -Most accurate for long forecast projections,
    forecasts longer that 30 days

9
Types of Forecasts
  • Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) - use
    mathematical models of physics principles to
    forecast future state from current conditions.
  • Process involves three major phases
  • Analysis Phase (estimate present conditions)
  • Prediction Phase (computer modeling)
  • Post-Processing Phase (use of products)
  • To justify NWP cost, it must beat forecasts of
    persistence, trend, analog and climatology

10
Analysis Phase
  • Purpose Estimate the current weather conditions
    to use to initialize the weather forecast
  • Implementation Because observations are always
    incomplete, the Analysis is accomplished by
    combining observations and the most recent
    forecast

11
Analysis Phase
  • Current weather conditions are observed around
    the global (surface data, radar, weather
    balloons, satellites, aircraft).
  • Millions of observations are transmitted via the
    Global Telecommunication System (GTS) to the
    various weather centers.
  • U.S. center is in D.C. and is named National
    Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP)

12
Analysis Phase
  • The operational weather centers sort, archive,
    and quality control the observations.
  • Computers then analyze the data and draw maps to
    help us interpret weather patterns.
  • Procedure is called Objective Analysis.
  • Final chart is referred to as an Analysis.
  • Computer models at weather centers make global or
    national weather forecast maps

13
Surface Data
Sparse data over oceans and Southern Hemisphere
Courtesy ECMWF
14
Surface Buoy Reports
Some buoy data over Southern Hemisphere
Courtesy ECMWF
15
Radiosonde Coverage
Little data over oceans and Southern Hemisphere
Courtesy ECMWF
16
Aircraft Reports
Little data over oceans and Southern Hemisphere
Courtesy ECMWF
17
Weather Satellites
  • Satellite observations fill data void
    regions
  • Geostationary Satellites
  • High temporal sampling
  • Low spatial resolution
  • Polar Orbiting Satellites
  • Low temporal sampling
  • High spatial resolution

Ahrens, Figs. 9.5 9.6
18
Obs from Geostationary Satellites
Courtesy ECMWF
19
Temperature from Polar Satellites
Courtesy ECMWF
20
Atmospheric Models
  • Weather models are based on mathematical
    equations that retain the most important aspects
    of atmospheric behavior
  • - Newton's 2nd Law (density, press, wind)
  • - Conservation of mass (density, wind)
  • - Conservation of energy (temp, wind)
  • - Equation of state (density, press, temp)
  • Governing equations relate time changes of fields
    to spatial distributions of the fields
  • e.g. warm to south southerly winds ? warming

21
Prediction Phase
  • Analysis of the current atmospheric state (wind,
    temp, press, moisture) are used to start the
    model equations running forward in time
  • Equations are solved for a short time period
    (5 minutes) over a large number (107 to 108) of
    discrete locations called grid points
  • Grid spacing is 2 km to 50 km horizontally
    and 100 m to 500 m vertically

22
Model Grid Boxes
100-500 m
10-20 km
23
A Lot Happens Inside a Grid Box(Tom Hamill,
CDC/NOAA)
Rocky Mountains
  • Approximate Size of One Grid Box for NCEP Global
    Ensemble Model
  • Note Variability in Elevation, Ground Cover, Land
    Use

Denver
Source www.aaccessmaps.co
24
13 km Model Terrain
Big mountain ranges, like the Sierra Nevada
Range, are resolved. But isolated peaks, like the
Catalinas, are not evident!
100 m contour
25
40 km Model Grid and Terrain
26
Post-Processing Phase
  • Computer draws maps of projected state to help
    humans interpret weather forecast
  • Observations, analyses and forecasts are
    disseminated to private and public agencies,
    such as the local NWS Forecast Office and UA
  • Forecasters use the computer maps, along with
    knowledge of local weather phenomena and model
    performance to issue regional forecasts
  • News media broadcast these forecasts to public

27
Suite of Official NWS Forecasts
CPC Predictions Page
28
NWP Forecasts
  • Next lecture, we will show more analyses and
    forecasts from the current suite of NCEP forecast
    products

29
Summary Key Concepts
  • Forecasts are needed by many users
  • There are several types of forecasts
  • Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP)
  • Use computer models to forecast weather
  • -Analysis Phase
  • -Prediction Phase
  • -Post-Processing Phase
  • Humans modify computer forecasts

30
Summary Key Concepts
  • National Center for Environment Prediction (NCEP)
    issues operational forecasts for
  • El Nino tropical SST anomalies
  • Seasonal outlooks
  • 10 to 15 day weather forecasts
  • 2 to 3 day fine scale forecasts

31
Assignment for Next Lecture
  • Topic - Weather Forecasting Part II
  • Reading - Ahrens pg 249-254
  • Problems - 9.11, 9.15, 9.18
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