Title: A Brief History of Weather Forecasting
1 A Brief History of Weather Forecasting
2 The Stone Age
- Prior to approximately 1955, forecasting was
basically a subjective art, and not very
skillful. - Observations were sparse, with only a few
scattered ship reports over the oceans. - The technology of forecasting was basically
subjective extrapolation of weather systems using
the upper level flow (the jet stream). - Local weather detailswhich really werent
understood-- were added subjectively.
3Upper Level Chart
41955-1965 The Advent of Modern Forecasting
- During this period, numerical weather
predictionforecasting future weather with
digital computers-- became the key tool in the
meteorologists tool bag. - The launch of the first weather satellite (1960)
gave meteorologists a view of the entire planet. - Weather radars were placed around the U.S.
explicitly showing areas of precipitation.
5Numerical Weather Prediction
- The advent of digital computers in the late 1940s
and early 1950s made possible the simulation of
atmospheric evolution numerically. - The basic idea is if you understand the current
state of the atmosphere, you can predict the
future using the basic physical equations that
describe the atmosphere.
6Numerical 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)
This equation is a time machine!
7Numerical Weather Prediction
Using a wide range of weather observations we can
create a three-dimensional description of the
atmosphere known as the initialization
8Numerical Weather Prediction
- This gives the distribution of mass and allows us
to calculate the various forces. - Then we can solve for the acceleration using
Fma - But this gives us the future. With the
acceleration we can calculate the velocities in
the future. - Similar idea with temperature and humidity.
9Numerical Weather Prediction
- These equations can be solved on a
three-dimensional grid. - 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.
10A Steady Improvement
- Faster computers and better understanding of the
atmosphere, allowed a better representation of
important physical processes in the models - More and more data became available for
initialization - As a result there has been a steady increase in
forecast skill from 1960 to now.
11Forecast Skill Improvement
National Weather Service
Forecast Error
Better
Year
12Satellite and Weather Radars Give Us a More
Comprehensive View of the Atmosphere
13Camano Island Weather Radar
141995-2003The computers models become capable of
simulating/forecasting local weather.
- As the grid spacing decreased to 15 km and below
it became apparent that many of the local weather
features could often be simulated and forecast by
the models.
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19The National Weather Service
Forecaster at the Seattle National Weather
Service Office
20But even with all this improving technology, some
forecasts fail or are inadequate. Why?
21Problems with the Models
- Some forecasts fail due to inadequacies in model
physics. How the model handles precipitation,
friction, and other processes. - Example too much precipitation on mountain
slopes - Intensive work at the UW to address this problems.
22Some forecasts fail due to poor initialization,
i.e., a poor starting description of the
atmosphere.
- This is particularly a problem for the Pacific
Northwest, because we are downstream of a
relatively data poor regionthe Pacific Ocean.
233 March 1999 Forecast a snowstorm got a
windstorm instead
24Eta Model Sea Level Pressure 12 UTC 2 March 99
Major Initialization Errors
25Pacific Analysis At 4 PM 18 November 2003
Bad Observation
26The problem of initialization should lessen as
new observation technologies come on line and
mature.New ways of using or assimilating the
data are also being developed.
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28Seascan Unmanned Aircraft
29Lack of Coastal Weather Information
- There is a lack of detailed weather information
immediately off the Northwest Coast. - Major issue lack of a coastal weather radar.
- The Northwest has the worst coastal weather radar
coverage in the nation. - Often cant see the details of weather features
before they make landfall. Seriously impacts
short-term forecasts.
NWS Doppler Radar
30Now
With Two New Radars
31A More Fundamental Problem
- In a real sense, the way we have been forecasting
is essentially flawed. - 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.
32A More Fundamental Problem
- Thus, there is fundamental uncertainty in weather
forecasts that can not be ignored. - Similarly, uncertainty in our model physics also
produces uncertainty in the forecasts. - We should be using probabilities for all our
forecasts or at least providing the range of
possibilities. - There is an approach to handling this issue that
is being explored by the forecasting
communityensemble forecasts.
33Ensemble Prediction
- Instead of making one forecastmake manyeach
with a slightly different initialization - Possible to do now with the vastly greater
computation resources that are available.
34Verification
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
35Ensemble 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.
36Ensemble-Based Probabilistic Products
37Forecast Dissemination The Achilles Heal
- Although the technology of weather prediction is
rapidly improving, our ability to communicate
what we know to the public is inadequate. - Although the Internet and wireless communication
providesfor the first timethe potential to
distribute large amounts of weather information,
we have not yet found an effective way to do so. - The amount of information is massive, how do we
distill and filter it for a wide variety of
users? - We are failing to communicate our degree of
confidence in the forecasts.