Title: Challenges in Urban Meteorology:
1Challenges in Urban Meteorology A Forum for
Users and Providers (September 21-23,
2004) Panel 4 Research and Development for
Urban Weather and Climate Applications Lloyd
Treinish IBM Thomas J. Watson Research
Center Yorktown Heights, NY lloydt_at_us.ibm.com http
//www.research.ibm.com/weather http//www.researc
h.ibm.com/people/l/lloydt
2Panel 4 Research and Development for Urban
Weather and Climate Applications
- We are a small weather modelling group at IBM
Research focusing on understanding of mesoscale
weather as it relates to weather-sensitive
operations and decision support, and developing
solutions for such applications - We have developed an operational, prototype
NWP-based system, which has provided regular
forecasts for the NYC-metropolitan area at 1 km
resolution as a testbed for over 3 years (Deep
Thunder) - To evaluate both meteorological and business
value beyond physical realism - To evaluate the level of practicality and
usability at reasonable cost - To develop an operational end-to-end
infrastructure and automation with focus on
high-performance computing, visualization and
system integration - To prototype business applications with actual
end users - Additional testbeds at 2 km resolution for
Chicago and Kansas City established earlier this
year - Although work is on-going and capabilities have
limitations, it is sufficiently evolved for some
practical urban applications and to assess
additional needs
3Current Focus and Issues
- Several specific urban (and suburban)
applications with short-term (three to 18 hours)
weather sensitivity - Emergency management, homeland security, energy
(distribution, operations and generation), road
maintenance and operations, traffic management
and airport terminal operations - Results to date are sufficiently compelling to
enable discussions with local government agencies
and private companies for each of these
applications in several urban areas in the US - Unfortunately, these interactions are ad hoc and
duplicative because - No formal mechanisms exist to engage such groups
or to transfer technology or services - There is no central clearing house of information
for urban decision makers to become aware of such
potential capabilities - Methods are needed to properly validate the
utility of such forecasting systems for these
applications - Traditional meteorological (statistical)
verification is not appropriate for many urban
applications - True end-user metrics are often ill-defined or
simply qualitative at present - What level of capability is good enough for an
effective deployment ? - Need for a heads-up for severe weather event,
even with opportunity for phase errors vs.
standard zone forecasts, which may be too vague - More focused dissemination since standard
meteorological products are a clear mismatch with
end-user decision makers, whose expertise is in
applications and understanding the impact of
weather as opposed to meteorology
4An Example (Among Many) NYC Metropolitan Area
Heavy Rainfall Event -- 8 September 2004
- Remnants of Hurricane Frances moved into the NYC
metropolitan area early in the morning of
September 8 - The heaviest rainfall occurred in an area
stretching from northeastern New Jersey through
central Westchester County, NY with amounts in
excess of 5" in some areas - There was widespread disruption of transportation
systems (e.g., road closures, flooded subways,
airport delays) and significant flooding in
several regions - Evening NWS zone forecast (2130 EDT, 7 September)
for the next day "showers and a slight chance
of thunderstorms, rain may be heavy at time in
the morning" - Revised NWS zone forecast (0440 EDT, 8
September), adding "locally heavy rain
possible" - NWS issued a flash flood watch at 0748 EDT
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7Forecast Results for Other Applications
- Interest in surface and upper air winds dictates
entirely different presentation - Virtual wind profilers at two locations within
1 km nest enhanced with trajectories to show
forecasted propagation
8Needs and Future Directions
- Despite promising results to date, improvements
are clearly needed in several key areas - Improved model representations of boundary layer
physics and cloud microphysics - Better observing (sampling) strategies coupled
with data assimilation to reduce errors in
initial conditions - Continued advances in overall system
cost-effectiveness (performance, throughput and
usability) - Further prototyping and development of systems
that can be used with confidence is required - End-to-end tailoring for specific application
focus (throughput, physics and dissemination)
forecast products when they are needed in the way
that they are needed - While RD continues, deploy now even with
limitations, to enable earlier understanding of
operational constraints and issues as well as to
develop user-oriented metrics - Establish additional testbeds for specific urban
weather issues or application sensitivity - Emphasize further two-way education and
collaboration with potential beneficiaries
9Needs and Future Directions
- Appropriate visualization is critical to enable
meteorological data to be usable for urban
applications methods are available but not
widely utilized - Understanding of how weather data need to be used
and why (e.g., human factors concerning how users
work and interact) - Understanding of how users perceive and interpret
weather visualizations - Data must be made relevant for different classes
of users using their terminology, and thus,
expressible in terms that can be readily
understood in real-time without expert
interpretation - Effective coupling to derived modelling and
analysis for proactive planning is necessary but
much more work needs to be done - Meteorology needs to be reasonably correct (good
enough) first, which has been the primary focus
for RD - Direct match to relevant physical problem (e.g.,
pavement, dispersion) - Direct match to relevant operational problem
(e.g., crew and equipment optimization
scheduling and routing that is impacted by
weather)