Title: A History of Modern Weather Forecasting
1 A History of Modern 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
16 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, in
the latter years using the upper level flow (the
jet stream). - Local weather detailswhich really werent
understood-- were added subjectively.
17Upper Level Chart
18The 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.
19L. F. Richardson An Insightful But Unsuccessful
Attempt
- In 1922 Richardson published a book Weather
Prediction by Numerical Process that describes an
approach to solving the primitive equations
solving the equations on a grid using finite
differences.
20L. F. Richardson
- He attempted to make a numerical forecast solving
the equations using a mechanical calculator - Unfortunately, the results were not good,
probably because of problems with his initial
conditions. - He imagined a giant theater filled with human
calculators - So NWP had to wait until a way of doing the
computations quickly was developed and more
dataespecially aloft became available.
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23NWP Becomes Possible
- By the 1940s there was an extensive upper air
network, 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
24The Eniac
25The Last Piece of the Puzzle
- Meteorologist realized that useful numerical
weather predictions were possible using a
simplified equation set that were easier to
solve. - The Barotropic Vorticity Equation (conservation
of absolute vorticity) was suggested as a first
step
26First NWP
- The first successful numerical prediction of
weather was made in April 1950, using the ENIAC
computer at Maryland's Aberdeen Proving Ground - The prediction was for 500 mb height, covered
North America, used a two-dimensional grid with
270 points about 700 km apart. - The results indicated that even primitive NWP was
superior to human subjective prediction. The NWP
era had begun.
27Evolving NWS
- Early 50s one-level barotropic model
- Late 50s Two-level baroclinic QG model (just
like Holton!) - 1960s Primitive Equation Models of increasing
resolution and number of levels. - Resolution increases (distance between grid
points decrease) 1958 380 km, 1985 80 km,
1995 40 km, 2000 22 km, 2002 12 km
28NWP Improvements in the Later 20th Century
- Better resolution
- Rapidly increasing data for initialization from
weather satellites, radars, more surface
observations, and other sources. - Better models better numerics and physics
29Forecast Skill Improvement
National Weather Service
Forecast Error
Better
Year
30The Advent Of Statistical Post-Processing
- In the 1960s and 1970s, the NWS developed and
began using statistical post-processing of model
outputknown to most as Model Output
StatisticsMOS. - The idea models have systematic biases..why not
remove them based on past performance. - Also, might be able to statistically add the
effects of local features not resolved by the
model.
31MOS
- 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.
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331990-2003The 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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38Satellite and Weather Radars Give Us a More
Comprehensive View of the Atmosphere
39Camano Island Weather Radar
40A More Fundamental Issue
- The work of Lorenz (1963, 965, 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.
41A More Fundamental Problem
- Similarly, uncertainty in our model physics also
produces uncertainty in the forecasts. - Lorenz is a series of experiments demonstrated
how small errors in initial conditions can grow
so that all deterministic forecast skill is lost
at about two weeks. - Talked about the butterfly effect
42- The Lorenz Diagramchaos
- Is not necessarily random
43Probabilistic NWP
- To deal with forecast uncertainty, Epstein (1969)
suggested stochastic-dynamic forecasting, in
which forecast errors are explicitly considered
during model integration, but this method was not
computationally practical. - Another approach, ensemble prediction, was
proposed by Leith (1974), who suggested that
prediction centers run a collection (ensemble) of
forecasts, each starting from a different initial
state. The variations in the resulting forecasts
could be used to estimate the uncertainty of the
prediction. But even the ensemble approach was
not tractable at this time due to limited
computer resources.
44Ensemble Prediction
- To create a collection of ensembles one can used
slightly different initializations or different
physics. - By the early 1990s, faster computers allowed the
initiation of global ensemble prediction at NCEP
and ECMWF (European Centre for Medium Range
Weather Forecasts).
45Ensemble Prediction
- During the past decade the size and
sophistication of the NCEP and ECMWF ensemble
systems have grown considerably, with the
medium-range, global ensemble system becoming an
integral tool for many forecasters. Also during
this period, NCEP has constructed a higher
resolution, short-range ensemble system (SREF).
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48The Evolving Forecasting Problem
- Prior to 1955, humans did everything--subjectivel
y forecast at all scales. - Between 1955 and 1980 numerical weather
prediction essentially took over synoptic
forecasting. Humans were left with deciding
between models or modifying (often
unsuccessfully) the computer guidance). - Humans retained the role of translating synoptic
guidance to the mesoscale/microscale. - Model Output Statistics (MOS) became competitive
with human forecasters during the 1980s.
49Evolving Forecasting
- By around 1990, large scale forecasts had gotten
very good for scales gt 1000 km for 0 to 48h - Starting to consistently get the big storms
- But humans still crucial for local forecasting,
interpreting imagery, and providing guidance on
the reliability of forecasts. - During the past ten years high resolution (or
mesoscale) NWP has begun to make inroads in
taking over mesoscale prediction. - The ability to produce probabilistic forecasts
using ensembles is improving quickly and should
become a central element in NWP during the next
decade.
50Sometimes humans even degrade the forecast if
they are not careful
51Ivars Seafood Mukilteo Restaurant Hit by 50-60
mph winds--A surge down the Strait.
"We were featuring fresh crab right on our plates
last night" Bob Donegan, Vice President of
Ivars
52The computer forecast models correctly forecast
the winds.
UW MM5 24-h forecast
- White (red) areas indicate sustained winds
exceeding 46 (32) mph, gusts would be higher
53NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SEATTLE WA 330 PM PST
TUE OCT 28 2003 WAZ006gt008-291215- EVERETT AND
VICINITY-SEATTLE METROPOLITAN AREA-TACOMA
AREA-INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...BELLEVUE-EDMONDS-IS
SAQUAH...PUYALLUP 330 PM PST TUE OCT 28
2003 .TONIGHT...SHOWERS THIS EVENING...MAINLY
SEATTLE SOUTHWARD... BECOMING SCATTERED
OVERNIGHT. LOWS IN THE LOWER 40S. SOUTHWEST WIND
10 TO 20 MPH SOUTH OF SEATTLE...NORTHWEST WIND 10
TO 20 MPH SEATTLE NORTHWARD.