Title: A Brief History of Weather Forecasting
1 A Brief History of Weather Forecasting
2The Beginning Weather Sayings
- "Red Sky at night, sailor's delight. Red sky in
the morning, sailor take warning." - "Mare's tails and mackerel scales make tall ships
take in their sails." - "Clear moon, frost soon."
- .
- "Halo around the sun or moon, rain or snow soon."
- "Rainbow in the morning gives you fair warning."
- "When the stars begin to huddle, the earth will
soon become a puddle."
3By the late 1700s, reasonable weather instruments
became available
4More and more people took observations.and even
some early networks were started
5The First Weather Forecaster?
6The problem no way to rapidly communicate
weather observations
- This changed around 1845 with the invention of
the telegraph
7First Real-Time Weather Maps
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9Weather Prediction Began
- The key approachsimple extrapolation
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11Ol 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.
Professor Cleveland Abbe, who issued the first
public Weather Synopsis and Probabilities on
February 19, 1871
12- On May 7, 1869, Abbe proposed to the Cincinnati
Chamber of Commerce "to inaugurate such a system,
by publishing in the daily papers, a weather
bulletin, which shall give the probable state of
the weather and river for Cincinnati and vicinity
one or two days in advance. - Cleveland Abbe released the first public weather
forecast on September 1, 1869. - Following the signing by President Ulysses S.
Grant of an authorization to establish a system
of weather observations and warnings of
approaching storms, on February 19, 1871, Abbe
issued the first official public Weather
Synopsis and Probabilities based on observations
taken at 735 a.m.
13- An early example of a report
- "Synopsis for past twenty-four hours the
barometric pressure had diminished in the
southern and Gulf states this morning it has
remained nearly stationary on the Lakes. A
decided diminution has appeared unannounced in
Missouri accompanied with a rapid rise in the
thermometer which is felt as far east as
Cincinnati the barometer in Missouri is about
four-tenths of an inch lower than on Erie and on
the Gulf. Fresh north and west winds are
prevailing in the north southerly winds in the
south. Probabilities emphasis added it is
probable that the low pressure in Missouri will
make itself felt decidedly tomorrow with
northerly winds and clouds on the Lakes, and
brisk southerly winds on the Gulf."
14The Next Major Advance
- The Norwegian Cyclone Model around 1920
151940s The Upper Air Chart
- Gave a 3D picture of what was happening
- Upper flow steered storms
16Upper Level Chart
17The Development of NWP
- Vilhelm Bjerknes in his landmark paper of 1904
suggested that NWP was possible. - A closed set of equations existed that could
predict the future atmosphere (primitive
equations) - But it wasnt practical then because there was no
reasonable way to do the computations and
sufficient data for initialization did not exist.
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19Numerical 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.
20The Eniac
21Numerical 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!
22Numerical Weather Prediction
Using a wide range of weather observations we can
create a three-dimensional description of the
atmosphere known as the initialization
23Numerical Weather Prediction
- Observations give 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.
24Numerical 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.
25A 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.
26Forecast Skill Improvement
National Weather Service
Forecast Error
Better
Year
27Satellite and Weather Radars Give Us a More
Comprehensive View of the Atmosphere
28Camano Island Weather Radar
291995-2003The 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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34The National Weather Service
Forecaster at the Seattle National Weather
Service Office
35But even with all this improving technology, some
forecasts fail or are inadequate. Why?
36Problems 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.
37Some 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.
383 March 1999 Forecast a snowstorm got a
windstorm instead
39Eta Model Sea Level Pressure 12 UTC 2 March 99
Major Initialization Errors
40Pacific Analysis At 4 PM 18 November 2003
Bad Observation
41The 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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43Seascan Unmanned Aircraft
44A 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.
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46- The Lorenz Diagramchaos
- Is not necessarily random
47A 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.
48Ensemble 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.
49Verification
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
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51Ensemble 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.
52Ensemble-Based Probabilistic Products