Title: WEATHER FORECASTING
1CHAPTER 14 WEATHER FORECASTING
2- Extra Credit Opportunity (5 pts.)
- Pick a historical hurricane
- Not Allison, Not Ike
- One page summary of storm
- Lifecycle, max winds, wind at landfall, impacts,
etc. - Print a plotting chart. Hand plot track, use
correct symbols.
3Favorable conditions for tornadoes
- In addition to moisture, instability, and
lifting, we need strong wind shear - At low levels, southerly winds bringing warm,
moist air into the area - Aloft, advection of dry air adds to instability
- Upper-level divergence leads to low-level upward
motion
Example from book
4And, especially for South Plains
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10What do we need to forecast?
- Temperatures (high/low/average/changes)
- Precipitation (will it rain or snow, and how
much?) - Wind (speed and direction)
- Cloud cover
- Severe/hazardous weather (tornadoes, hurricanes,
floods, etc.) - Fire weather
- Marine weather (forecasts for ships at sea)
- Pollution/smog/air quality
- Much more
11Timescales of forecasts
- Short-term forecasts (aka nowcasts) minutes to
a couple hours in advance - What time will the severe storm affect my area
and how intense will it be? - Short-range forecasts 6 to 60 hours in advance
- How likely is it to rain tomorrow?
- Mid-range forecasts 3-10 days in advance
- Will it be warm or cold next weekend?
- Climate predictions months or seasons in advance
- Will we have above normal or below normal
precipitation for the next ski season?
12Who makes forecasts?
- National Weather Service
- 122 weather forecast offices (WFOs) located
around the country - NWS issues a variety of forecasts, warnings, and
other products for a local area - We are covered by the WFO in League City (south
of Houston) - http//weather.gov
- http//www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/
13Who makes forecasts? (contd)
- National Centers for Environmental Prediction
- NCEP headquarters collects observations and runs
numerical models to make forecasts
http//www.ncep.noaa.gov - Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK (Severe
thunderstorm and tornado watches)
http//www.spc.noaa.gov - National Hurricane Center/Tropical Prediction
Center, Miami, FL (official hurricane forecasts,
watches and warnings) http//www.nhc.noaa.gov - Hydrometeorological Prediction Center, Camp
Springs, MD (precipitation and flood forecasts)
http//www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov - Climate Prediction Center, Camp Springs, MD
(seasonal outlooks, El Niño predictions)
http//www.cpc.noaa.gov - Private Companies
- TV and radio stations, The Weather Channel,
AccuWeather, WeatherNews, many others
14What is a good forecast?
- Depends on the user/customer
- For the general public, getting the high/low
within a few degrees is probably good enough - For an energy company, an error of a few degrees
can be very costly - Transportation departments need very accurate
snowfall forecasts will plows need to be
deployed? Should highways be closed? - Aviation industry needs to know cloud cover,
where storms are moving, turbulence, etc. - Human forecasters need to provide skill
- Anyone could forecast 80 and sunny every day of
the year in LA and be pretty close 90 of the
time - Its the other 10 where a skilled forecaster
earns his/her salary
15Manual forecasting techniques
- Before computers, forecasts were mainly limited
to predicting the movement of existing weather
(It snowed yesterday in Minnesota, so it will
snow today in Wisconsin) - Pattern recognition was (and still is) used by
experienced forecasters after looking at the
weather every day, you gain an instinct for
certain weather patterns - Ingredients-based forecasting
- Will there be moisture, instability, and lift?
- Rules of thumb
- If air temperature is 14C colder than water
temperature, lake effect snow is possible - For high temperature (in summer) take forecast
850-mb temperature at 0000 UTC, add 15C
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17Weather forecast models
- North American Mesoscale (NAM, previously called
Eta) Primary model used for forecasting in the
U.S. - Run every 6 hours (00, 06, 12, 18 UTC) out to 84
hours, 12-km horizontal grid spacing - Global Forecast System (GFS) Covers the entire
globe - Run every 6 hours, 35-km horizontal grid spacing
to 180 hours, 70-km grid to 384 hours (16 days) - Rapid Update Cycle (RUC)
- Run every hour out to 12 hours for short-term
forecasts - Mesoscale models Weather Research and
Forecasting (WRF), Regional Atmospheric Modeling
System (RAMS), Mesoscale Model version 5 (MM5) - Run by forecast offices, universities, etc., on a
regional basis - Climate Prediction Models
18The 4-panel map look at multiple levels at once
19Where to get numerical forecasts?
- http//www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/model/
(National Center for Atmospheric Research) - http//www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod/analysis/
(National Centers for Environmental Prediction) - http//hdwx.tamu.edu/wxdata.php (if on campus
network this site is still under construction!) - But, interpret this information with caution
until you have a good sense for how it works
for official forecasts and warnings, use
weather.gov (theyre experts in interpreting
numerical forecasts!) -
20A super-outbreak, right during your 201 Class
21Fig. 14.1, p. 415
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23Table 12.4, p. 345
24Table 12.5, p. 346
25http//vimeo.com/22970879Gets a little shaky
for a bit around 545 while he adjusts
camerahttp//www.youtube.com/watch?vT0FHTG9VETY
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vsA7TKSHJ_wMfeatu
rerelatedhttp//www.youtube.com/watch?vNjVW0Du
2ZIofeaturerelatedhttp//www.youtube.com/watch
?vEv2bZRV8eOofeaturerelmfuPhotos of the
Damagehttp//www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29
307,2067604,00.html http//www.chron.com/news/ph
otogallery/Severe_weather_across_the_country.html
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27PREDICTING LONG-TERM WEATHER AND CLIMATE PATTERNS
- El Niño, La Niña and Southern Oscillation
- ENSO is a combined atmosphere and ocean
phenomenon. - Originally, referred to unusually warm waters off
of NW coast of S. America. - Reverse of pressure difference between Tahiti and
Darwin is SO, Walker Cell reversal - This was found to be part of a large system which
also includes shift of convective max, changes in
the upper ocean structure and currents. - All together - ENSO
- Weather all over planet impacted -
teleconnections - Asia
- Australia
- South America
- Caribbean
- North America
28Fig. 14.13, p. 418
29Fig. 14.14, p. 419
30Fig. 14.15, p. 420
31Fig. 14.16, p. 421
32http//www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_mon
itoring/lanina/enso_evolution-status-fcsts-web.pdf
33Fig. 14.18, p. 422
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35Also, Atlantic hurricane season modulation. El
Niño years tend to be less active seasons, La
Niña enhanced.
Fig. 14.17, p. 421
36PREDICTING LONG-TERM WEATHER AND CLIMATE PATTERNS
- The other oscillations
- Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO)
- Similar to ENSO, 20-30 cycles, W. Coast impacts
- North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)
- Large impact on European weather, some on E. U.S.
- Affects tropical storm tracks
- Arctic (AO)
- Close cousin of NAO
37Fig. 14.19, p. 423
38Fig. 14.20, p. 424
39Fig. 14.21, p. 425