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Winter Weather Refresher

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Title: Winter Weather Refresher


1
Winter Weather Refresher
  • Stephen Jascourt and Bill Bua
  • COMET NWP resources
  • Stephen.Jascourt_at_noaa.gov
  • Bill.Bua_at_noaa.gov at NCEP

2
OUTLINE 1. Global Forecast System what did we
learn last winter? 2. Global Forecast System
whats new for 2003-2004? 3. Eta Model what did
we learn last two winters? 4. Eta Model whats
new? 5. Nonhydrostatic Mesoscale Model (NMM) 6.
Short range ensembles (SREF) 7. RUC-20 8.
COMET Slides with this blue background indicate
transition to next item in above outline
3
  • Global Forecast
  • System
  • What did we learn last winter?

4
October 2002 and August 2003 Implementations
  • Increased resolution from T170L42 to T254L64 for
    first 84 hours of forecast (10/02)
  • Replaced long wave radiation scheme 8/02 (now
    called RRTM)
  • Results in warmer troposphere, colder
    stratosphere
  • Should mitigate the GFS cold bias in troposphere
  • Colder stratosphere may impact data assimilation
    of satellite radiances

5
Anecdotal evidence about the GFS
  • GFS deepens mid-tropospheric troughs too much in
    eastern North America, particularly past day 3-4
  • Evidence that the GFS prefers positive PNA
    pattern (ridge west, trough east North America)
  • GFS often has better storm tracks along the Gulf
    and Atlantic coasts than the Eta-12
  • Reasons for above are unknown and may be
    regime-dependent
  • Likely will continue in winter 2003-04
  • Forecasters should assess anew this winter

6
Contrasting Winter Regimes 01-02 vs 02-03
Negative PNA in winter 2001-02 (positive height
anomalies over eastern US)
Positive PNA in winter 2002-03 (positive height
anomalies over Alaska/Yukon, negative over east
coast)
7
Comparison of 5 day 500-hPa height error DJF
01-02 to DJF 02-03
Too much troughing over eastern US, not enough
across north Pacific and Hudson Bay
Too much ridging over northern oceans, too much
trough over NH mid-latitude continents
8
GFS lower tropospheric cold bias in cold season
00 UTC GFS analysis and forecast biases for
850-hPa temperatures at 12-h intervals for
January 2002
0ºC
24-h
analysis
Cold bias over west, spreads across northern
plains during forecast.
36-h
Magnitude may depend on flow regime
12-h
48-h
9
Compare January 2002 to 2003 850-hPa for 1st 48
hrs of forecast
00 UTC GFS analysis and forecast biases for
850-hPa temperatures at 12-h intervals for
January 2003
0ºC
24-h
analysis
Overall forecast bias still gets colder with time
but pattern of bias different under different
regime
PNA regime changes biases in upper Midwest by
about 1-2ºC?
36-h
12-h
48-h
10
Cold air damming and propagation along barrier
bad due to sigma coordinate 2001-02 at T170
Model topo. (m)
Contourstemperature error (surface, deg C)
Colorsmodel terrain height
24-hour GFS fcst of 2-m temperature was 8C too
warm over High Plains during start of arctic
outbreak (T170)!
11
Cold air damming and propagation along barrier
bad due to sigma coordinate 2002-03 at T254
Model topo. (m)
Contourstemperature error (surface, deg C)
Colorsmodel terrain height
At T254, 10ºC too warm at 2-m in GFS 48-hr
forecast near DEN!
12
AVN generally too wet too large precip area and
with a generally wet bias
AVN 36-h forecast of 24-h precipitation verifying
12z 3 March 2002
24-h gage analysis of precipitation verifying 12z
3 March 2002
13
T254 still has same precipitation bias
Grid 211 24, 48, 72-hr fcsts of 24-hr accum prec
ECMWF
ECMWF
0.4
0.4
GFS
UKMET
UKMET
GFS
0.2
0.2
Equitable Threat Score
Equitable Threat Score
JAN 2003 Dry month
FEB 2003 Wet month
UKMET
GFS
ECMWF
UKMET
ECMWF
GFS
1.0
1.0
BIAS
BIAS
14
GFS tends not to be able to remove enough
elevated CAPE
  • Why do we care about this in the cold season?
  • Can result in overdevelopment of frontal waves
  • Waves move too far into the cold air
  • Overdevelopment results in problems with amount
    (too much), location, and type of precipitation
  • Example follows from winter 2001-2002
  • Note This problem is not expected to improve
    with resolution increase on October 29, 2002
  • The source of the problem is physics, rather than
    dynamics

15
GFS tends not to be able to remove enough
elevated CAPE - example
FORECAST versus ANALYSIS low positions and
pressures at 6 hour intervals from 00z7Dec01
through 12z9Dec01from GFS run of 00 UTC 7 Dec 2001
996
1003
1006!
1008
1012!
1011
12z09Dec01
12z08Dec01 (lows collocated)
16
GFS tends not to be able to remove enough
elevated CAPE - example
Verification, 12z8Dec01
Verification, 12z9Dec01
Low tracks Forecast Analysis
17
Reasons for overdevelopment in this GFS forecast
GFS tends not to be able to remove enough
elevated CAPE
  • Deep, moist, conditionally unstable elevated
    layer
  • Convective scheme cannot remove this instability
    (or enough of it)
  • Grid-scale scheme convects instead, which results
    in too much
  • Latent heating in 850-500 hPa layer
  • Vorticity spin-up at low- and mid-levels
  • Frontal wave intensification
  • Moisture convergence in lower troposphere
    (results in even more moisture entering the grid
    column!)

18
Ensembles more consistent run to run than
operational higher-resolution GFS
Yellow operational MRF,
same valid times Initial00 UTC 8 April 2002
Initial00 UTC 9 April 2002
19
3-day forecast from 00 UTC 11/2/01, spaghetti
diagram for ensemble
global
Ensembles help assess forecast confidence and
range of scenarios
Uncertain location of incoming western trough
Uncertain amplitude of eastern trough
From CDC web site http//www.cdc.noaa.gov/map/i
mages/ens/ens.html
20
Relative Measure of Predictability (RMOP)measure
of how likely the ensemble mean is
http//wwwt.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/gmb/ens/index.html
(note wwwt may become www)
  • Based on last 30 days of ensemble performance to
    take into account regime predictability and
    general model performance
  • Ensemble mean and each ensemble member placed in
    equally likely climatological bins (bins vary
    seasonally and geographically to account for
    typical variability)
  • RMOP colors with percentage below color bar show
    the percentile rank of todays forecast compared
    to the last 30 days for number of ensemble
    members agreeing with their ensemble means
    (agreeing with in the same bin)
  • For example, red (90) means the ensemble
    distribution has more members in the same bin as
    the mean than 90 of the cases in the past 30
    days, suggesting this is among the most
    predictable forecasts in the last month
  • RMOP probability numbers (above the color bar)
  • Calibrated probability that ensemble mean will
    verify based on how often the ensemble mean
    verified when the same number of ensemble members
    were in the bin containing the ensemble mean
    during the past 30 days

21
Unpredictable heights in Strong gradient
Ridge/Trough Highly predictable
22
  • Global Forecast
  • System
  • Whats new for 2003-2004?

23
Resolution through boreal winter 2003-04
GFS 00, 06, 12, 18 UTC MRF are same as fields
labeled AVN. MRF fields to be discontinued
T254 L64
T170 L42
T126 L28
84h 180h 384h
3½d 7½d 16d
2003 until . Planned change (may only be
resolution)
by 12/6/03
T126 L28
T126 L28
Ensembles
T62 L28
T62 L28
84h 180h 384h
3½d 7½d 16d
84h 180h 384h
3½d 7½d 16d
11 members (1 control, 10 perturbations)
11 members (1 cont., 10 pert) 00 UTC,
12 UTC 00 UTC,
06 UTC, 12 UTC, 18 UTC
24
Topography comparisonT254 topography (0-3.5 days)
25
Resolution of topography affects precip forecast
Verification
T170
T254
Sharper precipitation maxima, slightly better
placement of precipitation as a consequence of
increased horizontal resolution (first 3 1/2 days
only!)
26
Topography comparisonT170 topography (3.5-7.5
days)
27
Topography comparisonT126 topography (7.5-16
days), also ensembles 0-3.5 days until 12/06/03,
then 0-7.5 days
28
Topography comparisonT62 topography(ensembles
3.5-16 days until 12/06/03, then 7.5-16 days)
29
New Long Wave Radiation Scheme and Changes to
Cloud-Long Wave Radiation Interaction
  • More efficient (runs twice as fast)
  • More accurate (by a factor of 5 to 10!)
  • Decreased lower tropospheric cold bias and upper
    tropospheric/lower stratospheric warm bias in
    parallel experiments
  • High stratosphere cold bias occurs (may affect
    data assimilation of radiances?)

Details at http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu2/avclra
d2c.htm and http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu2/avradtr
4.htm
30
GFS warmer with new long wave scheme
Skin T
Skin and 2-meter temperatures with RRTM long wave
are higher than old GFS LW radiation early in the
forecast at high latitudes
2-meter T
31
Near-surface temperature increase in RRTM over
old GFS LW radiation increases through 5 days
(average difference around 1oC)
GFS warmer with new long wave scheme
32
  • Eta ModelWhat did we learn last two winters?
  • Model has been stable (no major changes, several
    minor fixes) from December 2001 through June 2003

33
  • Examine the analysis!
  • Compare against satellite, radar, surface data,
    etc.!
  • Large scale features set the forecast scenario
  • Model details and high resolution topography and
    coastlines will not help forecast accuracy if the
    large-scale winds are not well forecast or the
    cyclone track or intensity is off.
  • Look off the coasts is the Atlantic ridge too
    weak in the model? Is the trough off the west
    coast sharp enough? Is the jet core, where
    parcels are peeling anticyclonically into,
    through, and out of, in the right position? How
    do you expect errors in such features will affect
    the strength of a cold surface high or the
    amplitude and timing of a major wave in the model
    forecast?

34
Sensitivity to multiple factors
B, F (in)
A,C, D, E, G, H (mm)
Initial conditions
  • GFS vs. Eta initial state in same model
  • compare B vs. F
  • compare D vs. G

B
C
D
A
Physics
  • Different convective parameterizations in same
    model
  • compare C vs. D vs. H

Resolution
F
H
E
G
  • Different resolutions in same model
  • compare A vs. C vs. B
  • Also, different models with same initial
    condition
  • compare E vs. F

Look at different models and ensembles! Check
for bad init. cond. and unphysical behavior in
forecast
35
Remember, saturation for ice occurs at much lower
RH with respect to water
  • Affects your interpretation of cloud base/top
    and cloud coverage

(new 32 km SREF is between brown and pink curves)
Model cloud top of overcast deck
Forecast sounding
Ice saturation threshold in 12 km Eta model
(new 32 km SREF is between brown and pink curves)
Model is saturated with respect to ice
Model cloud base
36
  • Drying trend during forecast
  • precipitable water becomes steadily drier during
    forecast compared to verification
  • QPF also dries up at increasing forecast range
    compared to verification
  • Monthly total 24-h forecast minus observed
    precipitation for Feb 2003
  • lower (or more negative) values at later times
    into forecast period

Valid at 36 h
Valid at 60 h
Valid at 84 h
37
Watch for moisture stream getting intercepted by
convection
  • Convective scheme drops too little precip,
    leaving moisture stream free to reach area where
    dynamics are causing grid-scale lift in colder
    air.
  • In reality, convection intercepts moisture stream.

Moist inflow
7inches
5inches
1inch
Moist inflow
Moist inflow
38
Snow drifting downwind while falling Most falls
on upwind side but some advects downwind of ridges
39
Snow drifting downwind while falling Most falls
on upwind side but some advects downwind of ridges
40
Lake Effect
  • Lake-effect band placement excellent
  • precip intensity too weak by factor of at least 3
    overall and 10 for peak local amounts
  • cant resolve multiple bands and waves

41
Isothermal layers form at 0 oC
Hourly BUFR sounding
0oC
42
Precipitation Type microphysics vs. diagnostic
output
Hourly BUFR sounding
now in BUFKIT
43
Precip type grids are not from model microphysics
Baldwin-Schichtel diagnostic algorithm
  • Tends to have bias against SN in Eta
    overforecasts ZR
  • Purpose is to alert forecaster to potential
    hazardous weather (ZR is most hazardous) so that
    forecaster inspects situation carefully and
    determines for him/herself the precip type

44
Precipitation Type microphysics vs. diagnostic
output
Overrunning case at LEX (Kentucky)
Hourly BUFR sounding
Both all liquid
0oC
45
Precipitation Type microphysics vs. diagnostic
output
Overrunning case at LEX (Kentucky)
Hourly BUFR sounding
Microphysics72 frozen precip Baldwinrain
0oC
46
Precipitation Type microphysics vs. diagnostic
output
Overrunning case at LEX (Kentucky)
Hourly BUFR sounding
Microphysicsmix of 21 frozen Baldwinrain
0oC
47
Precipitation Type microphysics vs. diagnostic
output
Overrunning case at MSL (Alabama)
Hourly BUFR sounding
Microphysics94 frozen Baldwinrain
0oC
48
Precipitation Type microphysics vs. diagnostic
output
Overrunning case at MSL (Alabama)
Hourly BUFR sounding
Microphysicsmix with only 13 frozen Baldwinrain
0oC
49
Patchy snow cover with bare ground spots changed
26 Feb 2002
  • Before model fix (as in soundings to the left)
  • 2-meter temperatures too cold over snow
  • 850 temperatures too warm over Canada
  • arctic boundary layer poorly handled
  • After model fix (as in schematic below)
  • 2-meter temps warmer, 850 temps cooler so
    verifies better
  • arctic boundary layer structure still poor,
    seldom makes very stable even when it should

Too warm (before fix)
Too cold
50
Land surface upgrade summer 2001
  • Cold season processes (Koren et al 1999)
  • Patchy snow cover
  • Frozen soil (new state variable)
  • Variable snow pack density (new state variable)
  • Soil heat flux under snowpack (Lunardini 1981)
  • New maximum snow albedo database (Robinson
    Kukla 1985)
  • Takes into account observed effect of vegetation
    on the albedo of grid box

51
Effect on high temperature with thin snow cover
NEW snowcover - ground gt freezing
OLD snowcover groundfreezing
Ground holds at freezing
SKIN TEMP
OBS
OBS
Model ? 0 C
First day better but still too cool Second day
worse because not all snow melted yet
2 m AIR TEMP
North Platt, Neb.
  • previous model formulation (until snow completely
    melts)gt all incoming energy melts/sublimates
    snow gt skin temp held at freezing
  • gt 2-m air temp held near freezing
  • Current formulationgt patchy snow cover for
    snow depth less than threshold depth (veg-type
    dependent) gt reduces surface albedo gt
    accelerates melting gt more available energy at
    sfc
  • gt skin temp can exceed 0 C gt 2-m air temp rises
    further above freezing.

0 C
18Z
52
Problems with light, fluffy snowcover
  • If daily satellite snow analysis (from Satellite
    Analysis Branch) has snowcover where model first
    guess has none, then snow pack is added to the
    Eta analysis
  • Depth assumed to be 1.5, 51 snowwater ratio
    (yields water equivalent of 0.3)
  • If actual snow cover has less average water
    content than 0.3, it will melt sooner and the
    ground will heat faster in reality than in the
    model forecast

9-hr 850-hPa temp fcst
9-hr 2-m temp fcst
Forecast is lt4ºC
6º-12ºC
Verification is 8º-12ºC!
53
  • Model outputs
  • FREEZING LEVEL
  • Extended below model topography using standard
    atmosphere lapse rate, but this will miss cold
    air trapped below valley inversion
  • 12-km grids getting into AWIPS
  • NCEP sends the following fields on 12-km grid for
    distribution over SBN
  • precipitation and convective precipitation (3 h
    accumulation)
  • T, RH at 2 meters
  • U, V at 10 meters
  • MSLP and EMSL (Shuell and Mesinger reductions to
    sea level)
  • station pressure on model terrain
  • precipitable water
  • CAPE/CIN based on parcel from lowest model layer
  • LI based on most unstable of the 6 bottom
    30-hPa-thick average parcels
  • helicity (0-3 km using storm motion from Bunkers
    method)

54
  • Eta Model
  • Whats new for 2003-2004?

55
  • Summer 2003 change bundle (5 items)
  • Forecast impact mostly from item 3, especially
    better holding in low clouds. Other items combine
    for slight improvement in winds and moisture
    early in forecast (up to 12 hours)
  • Convection and fundamentals of data assimilation
    unchanged, therefore overall forecast character
    will be same as before
  • NEXRAD WINDS
  • Superobs (combining individual data points) to 1
    km radial x 6o azimuth
  • Not used where VAD quality flag says bad data
    (including birds) or where radar beam runs into
    model topography
  • 32 km test shows no forecast impact
  • 10 km test but without assimilation cycling shows
    improved fits to raob initially but no overall
    forecast impact
  • 2) Radiance processing
  • Upgrade to global model processing methods,
    including new emissivity model over land and use
    NOAA-17 polar orbiter data (not previously used,
    should improve analysis over Pacific though test
    error stats show no change)
  • Allows channels used previously only over water
    to be used over land.
  • Hardly any overall forecast impact (32 km test)

56
  • Summer 2003 change bundle (5 items)
  • 3) Output and Radiation made consistent with the
    new (Nov 2001) cloud microphysics
  • Microphysics fields cycled
  • Longwave effects of clouds updated hourly instead
    of every 2 hours
  • Convective cloud fraction increased shallow
    convection ? 10 cloudcover
  • Formulation for cloud fraction changes to Xu and
    Randall (1996), instead of Randall (1994)
  • RH for cloud fraction calculated consistently
    with Nov 2001 microphysics
  • Cloud optical properties changed
  • Output changed (modified or new variables)
  • Precipitable water field now includes only vapor
    (had included condensate, resulting in excessive
    values in regions of very heavy precipitation)
  • Cloud water, cloud ice, rain, snow, and total
    condensate separately output
  • Output cloud-base and cloud-top pressures from
    shallow nonprecipitating convection, deep
    convection, and grid-scale clouds separately
  • Visibility calculations have been changed to use
    the new cloud fields, responding to mixing ratios
    of cloud water, cloud ice, rain, and snow
  • Low-level clouds in the lowest 100 mb and
    upper-level clouds above the tropopause are no
    longer ignored

57
  • Summer 2003 change bundle (5 items)
  • 3) Output and Radiation made consistent with the
    new (Nov 2001) cloud microphysics
  • Forecast impact in 32 km test
  • lt0.5 precip improved, gt0.5 even drier
  • Improved slightly all forecast hours fit to
    raobs and 2-meter temperatures
  • General forecast impact usually seen in
    individual forecasts
  • Increase in partly cloudy and overcast
    conditions (was too little)
  • Smaller diurnal range when low clouds are
    present (was too large)
  • Cooler daytime temperatures where shallow
    boundary-layer cumulus form
  • Fog/low clouds burn off slower during the
    morning (occurred much too early still somewhat
    too early)
  • Consistently better positioning of warm fronts
    during the daytime in moist situations when low
    clouds keep the surface cool, preventing mixing
    from advancing the surface warm front

58
  • Summer 2003 change bundle (5 items)
  • 4) GOES cloud-top assimilation
  • Remove moisture above observed cloud tops
  • Add moisture at observed cloud levels
  • Use as top anchor point for precip assimilation
    if have to add precipitating cloud
  • Forecast impact on overall error statistics
    mixed, but viewing individual cases shows
    improvement in structure and pattern of
    precipitation early in the forecast (32 km test)
  • 5) Stage IV precipitation assimilation
  • Upgraded from Stage II to Stage IV adds quality
    control
  • Forecast impact small but improvement measured in
    precipitation during EDAS cycle, which improves
    soil moisture a little (32 km test)
  • Also, many additional output variables in grib
    files on NCEP server
  • Hourly output to 36 hours, and 6, 18 UTC runs out
    to 84 hours
  • New land surface variables including snow depth
    and percentage of snow cover
  • More discussion on the model change bundle at
  • http//deved.meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu2/EtaMay2003upd
    ate.htm
  • More technical details in the Technical
    Procedures Bulletin at
  • http//wwwt.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/tpb.spring03/tpb
    .htm

59
No METAR surface temperatures in Eta analysis
12 UTC analysis 00 UTC EDAS analysis (includes
late data) plus 3
h forecast and assimilate data for new analysis
at 03, 06, 09, 12 UTC
Why METAR temperatures removed? Creates bad
analysis soundings!
Starts with good 00 UTC EDAS sounding
3h forecast from 9 UTC analysis much too cold
above nocturnal inversion
12 UTC raob
00 UTC raob
How? By spreading influence upward
Times are valid times of 1, 2, and 3 hour
forecasts
Arrows show when data added
  • Hourly soundings starting with 00 UTC EDAS.
  • Small radiative cooling in bottom 75 hPa every
    hour
  • Large cooling through lowest 150 hPa after data
    added at 3, 6, and 9 UTC.

Sounding jumps when data added
60
No METAR surface temperatures in Eta analysis
  • RUC still uses METAR temperatures. RUCs
    terrain-following coordinate system allows it to
    take advantage of good ways to handle surface
    data.
  • Eta still uses other parts of METARs (winds,
    dewpoints, pressure)
  • Eta stopped using all surface temperature
    observations over land on Sep 10, 2003
  • Eta uses only surface observations within 6
    minutes of analyses times as of Sep 10, 2003
  • GFS never used METAR temperatures, only uses
    METAR pressures

Whats the forecast impact?
Precip 3 weeks summer improved over east,
especially 24 h amounts gt 0.50, westno
change Surface T, Td, wind nearly same as with
METAR temperatures Aloft (heights, T, wind)
nearly same, slight improvement in
mid-troposphere Overall large improvement in
32-km reanalysis fits to obs, but brief 12-km
test smaller changes
RMS differences from raob temperature profiles
No T from METAR
With T from METAR
Analyses
12 h forecast 60 h
forecast
60 h forecast fits raob T same except worse near
ground
12 h forecast fits raob T same except worse near
ground
Fits raob T profile better except near ground
RMS temperature difference from raobs
32-km reanalysis, winter (1 month) 12-km
test, summer (3 weeks) 12-km test, summer (3
weeks)
61
  • Changes testing for possible mid-winter
    implementation (late January or February)
  • Follow the comet.eta newsgroup for updates in
    case things dont go as planned
  • 1) Overhaul of short wave radiation but may not
    get in
  • Will be like GFS except will ignore short-wave
    absorption by oxygen and carbon dioxide
  • GFS solar radiation described at
    http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu2/avradtr1.htm
  • Was the oldest component of the model and needed
    catching up
  • Forecast impact will reduce the present high
    bias in incoming solar radiation, both clear sky
    and through clouds. Forecast is consistently
    colder preliminary tests show increased errors
    because too cold will not be included in change
    package unless can be corrected
  • 2) Land surface changes
  • Will reduce snow depth threshold for patchy snow
    (presently assumes bare patches if depth less
    than 5 over grass up to 16 over forest)
  • Albedo will vary with solar zenith angle, so more
    solar energy is reflected and less available for
    heating at low sun angles (e.g. morning, evening
    and all day during winter at high latitudes)
  • Precip adds to snowpack if model microphysics
    indicates frozen fraction gt 50 (presently, adds
    to snowpack if lowest layer air temperature is
    below freezing)
  • Numerous other technical and numerical
    refinements
  • Forecast impact expected to reduce diurnal range
    (which has been too large) and probably cause a
    net overall cooling compared to present model

62
  • Changes testing for possible midwinter
    implementation (late January or February)
  • 3) Bias adjustment of precipitation assimilation
  • Multisensor precipitation analyses are currently
    assimilated into the EDAS
  • Assimilated starting 12 hours before the model
    initial time
  • Has affect of stimulating precipitation during
    12-hour assimilation cycle where observations
    show it should occur and inhibiting it elsewhere
  • Affects soil moisture and thus later evaporation
  • Helps spin up microphysics and vertical motion in
    right places based on observed precip
  • NO PRECIP ASSIMILATION WHERE SNOW only where
    rain
  • Currently the precip amounts assimilated have a
    low bias
  • Bias as determined by large-scale several-week
    comparison of gauge and multisensor analyses will
    be removed this is the only change
  • Forecast impact primarily warm season, not
    winter. Should slightly reduce the tendency of
    the model to dry out during the forecast
  • 4) GOES 12 radiances added
  • These will substitute for GOES-8 radiances.
    Eastern North America and offshore waters have
    had no GOES radiance coverage in the Eta model
    since GOES-8 was replaced by GOES-12 in April,
    2003
  • OVERALL temperatures cooler and matches diurnal
    curve better

63
  • NONHYDROSTATIC
  • MESOSCALE
  • MODEL
  • New hybrid vertical coordinate
  • Replaced the Eta model for high-resolution
    windows runs in 2002
  • May replace Eta completely during 2005
  • Provides operational support for fire weather and
    dispersion/emergency
  • Similar physics to Eta
  • No assimilation cycling yet, starts with Eta-12
    analysis
  • BEGINS THE TRANSITION TOWARD WRF
    (Weather Research and Forecasting Model)
  • Modular design different model options plug in
  • WRF will allow collaborators outside NCEP to run
    the same model and to supply parameterizations
    that will more readily work in the NCEP
    operational environment (a great difficulty now)
  • NMM will be one version of WRF
  • WRF ensemble will run in high-resolution window
    slot Fall 2004

64
High-resolution Window Runs
  • Eta used for initial and boundary conditions
  • Once per day 10 km over Alaska, 8 km over west,
    central, east CONUS
  • Twice per day 8 km over Hawaii, Puerto Rico
  • Not operational system reliability pretty good
    but not 100

65
  • Small-domain specialty runs
  • 26 small domains
  • One operational 8-km run each at 00, 06, 12, 18
    UTC
  • Supports fire weather operations during fire
    season
  • SPC selects domain if severe threat high
  • HPC can select domain for winter weather event
  • 4-km runs on call operational service to feed
    dispersion model in emergency

66
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67
Hybrid and Eta Coordinates
Ptop (constant pressure)
Ptop (constant pressure)
? 0
Pressure domain
400 hPa
? 0
Sigma domain
? 1
MSL
? 1
68
Vertical resolution and vertical coordinate
Layers slope with terrain 60 flat
layers, 60 everywhere
fewer above high terrain
  • Tick marks are actual model levels from BUFR
    sounding files
  • Same stations used on left (NMM) and right (Eta)
  • Note difference in station elevation. NMM
    usually lower (stations usually in valleys)
  • Note difference in vertical resolution with
    increasing station elevation

NMM Eta
s coordinate up to 400 hPa p coordinate above 400
hPa
69
  • NMM Forecast Characteristics (compared to Eta)
  • Large-scale conditions same as Eta
  • Nocturnal cold bias, esp. clear/calm
  • Cold bias with old snow because treated same as
    fresh snow in NMM
  • 10-m winds slightly too weak over western states
  • More flow through valleys
  • Not as good for valley inversion trapping
  • Better for downslope (and diurnal upslope too)
  • More flow over ridges instead of around ridges
  • Better gravity waves affects winds and lee-wave
    temperatures
  • More detail
  • Catches more of the spotty mountain convection
    missed by Eta
  • Too much orographic precip in heavy precip
    episodes
  • Features closer to true amplitude
  • Small displacement error gives bigger (worse) RMS
    error stats than too-smooth Eta model yet more
    physically descriptive forecast

70
Topography NMM vs. Eta
  • 30 data (approx 1 km)
  • Eta 12 km silhouette topo
  • Valleys must be at least 2 grid boxes 24 km
    wide because step coordinate requires zero wind
    at valley walls
  • NMM 8 km mean topo
  • Peaks about same, valleys deeper and sharper

71
Topography NMM vs. Eta
  • Peaks not generally higher in NMM
  • Valleys deeper in NMM
  • More detail in NMM
  • Even more detail over high plains in NMM

Zoomed view
72
  • Topographic influence on winds
  • NMM Eta

Flow into/through valley
Flow over valley - good if well-mixed
- good for
trapping/damming
Downslope follows terrain
Downslope doesnt reach bottom

or corners
Overhead view, Topo contours
Flow over
Flow around
73
Dissemination
  • GRIB and BUFR data available for ftp
  • Fields do not go out over SBN
  • Model will not run if hurricane model needs to
    run (they share same time slot on computer)
  • How do I get it?
  • The model grib files are accessed on
    ftp//ftpprd.ncep.noaa.gov/pub/emc/mmb/mmbpll/
  • In these directories
  • alaska10.t00z
  • central08.t12z
  • east08.t18z
  • hi08.t00z
  • hi08.t12z
  • pr08.t06z
  • pr08.t18z
  • west08.t06z

74
Short-Range Ensemble Forecasts (SREF)
  • What? (caution changes planned by December,
    details a few slides later)
  • 5 Eta 48 km (control 2 perturbation pairs)
  • 5 Regional Spectral Model 48 km (control 2
    perturbation pairs, based on GFS analysis) RSM
    currently has old AVN/MRF physics
  • 5 Eta members using Kain-Fritsch convective
    parameterization
  • When?
  • 21, 09 UTC in time for your use with 00, 12 UTC
    Eta
  • Status?
  • Officially operational (24x7 computer
    support/reliability)
  • Output might get into AWIPS in fall 2004 (OB-4)
  • New user-friendly web interface linked from SREF
    home page,
  • which is http//wwwt.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/SREF/
    SREF.html

75
http//wwwt.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/SREF/SREF.html N
ote wwwt address may change to www
Go here, and it brings up this
76
http//wwwt.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/SREF/SREF.html N
CEP Short range ensembles on the web. Note wwwt
address may change to www
77
Mean and Spread charts Dominant Precip Type
  • Shows the precipitation type diagnosed in the
    largest number of ensemble members

Precipitation type determined by
Baldwin-Schichtel algorithm
78
Spaghetti Diagrams Range of uncertainty
79
Probability Charts percentage of members
exceeding threshold
SREF
Percentage of members with QPF gt .25/24h
010519/0000V63 SREFX-CMB 24HR PQPF OF .25
80
Probability Charts threshold exceeded by
specified percentage
SREF
Highest QPF at each point exceeded by 60 of the
ensemble members
010519/0000V63 SREFX-CMB SHADED, IN AT LEAST
60 OF MEMBES
81
Individual Station Plots MeteogramsEnsemble
mean and all members. Experimental, available by
fall 2003linked on http//www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/m
mb/research/meso.products.html
82
Precip-type algorithmsensemble of ptype from
operational Eta. Available during fall/winter
linked on http//www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/researc
h/meso.products.html
83
Tentative New SREF Configuration (by 12/03)
  • 15 members (same number as now)
  • More physics diversity (convection scheme and
    microphysics)
  • Less initial condition diversity one
    positive-negative perturbation pair (2 now)
  • 32-38km or equivalent (RSM) horizontal resolution
    with 60 levels
  • Upgrade RSM physics to current GFS physics
  • BUFR sounding and surface data to be available
    for all members

 
84
Reasons for proposed change
  • Insufficient spread (verifying analyses falling
    outside range of solutions provided by the SREF)
  • Evidence that physics diversity increases spread
    in solutions (even in cold season, when dynamics
    typically more important)

Contours around surface low
85
Distribution verifies better with physics
diversity
  • Analyze distribution with Talagrand diagram
  • Rank each ensemble member at each grid point from
    lowest to highest forecast value. 15 ensemble
    members means rankings are 1, 2, 3, , 15
  • Identify verification as less than 1, between 1
    and 2, , between 14 and 15, higher than 15
  • Make climatology of how many times verification
    falls into each position

Ensemble spread too small verification less than
smallest forecast or bigger than largest forecast
value 37 of the time
Ensemble spread slightly better verification
less than smallest forecast or bigger than
largest forecast value 25 of the time
SREF with 15 members 5 Eta using BMJ
convection, 5 Eta using KF convection, 5 RSM
SREF with 10 members 5 Eta using BMJ
convection, 5 RSM
Percentage with verification value gt largest
forecast value
Percentage with verification value lt smallest
forecast value
  • New SREF, 15 members
  • More physics diversity
  • fewer initial condition perturbations

Ensemble spread nearly perfect! Verification
almost equally likely in every slot.
86
Winter Weather Experiment III Participants Map
87
When will WWE-III occur?
  • Begins Oct. 1, 2003 (Intermountain WFOs)
  • Test and evaluation period conducted Sept. 15 -
    Sept. 30, 2003
  • Nov. 1, 2003 (Remaining WFOs)
  • Test and evaluation period conducted Oct. 15 -
    Oct. 31, 2003
  • Occurs twice daily
  • HPC routinely produces enhanced graphics in
    support of WWE
  • WFOs participate only when impacted by an event
  • View graphics and participate in a 15 minute
    (maximum) collaboration call
  • Collaboration occurs after arrival of updated
    operational and ensemble guidance, but still
    early enough in the forecast process to foster
    different opinions among participants
  • Ends April 1, 2004
  • May be extended to no later than May 1, 2004
    depending on how active the winter has been

88
WWE-III HPC will provide..
  • Accumulation Graphics
  • Loops of precipitation in 6 hour increments out
    to 72 hours (CONUS)
  • Melted QPF, Snow, Freezing Rain, and the precip
    type grid used to convert melted to winter precip
  • HPC forecasters chooses a QPF source (HPC, Eta,
    GFS, or SREF) and a precip type grid to convert
    the QPF to accumulations (from the Eta, GFS, or
    SREFs)
  • EVENT Total Accumulation Graphic (ETAG)
  • Manually edited accumulations over an event
  • Separate graphics for Combined Snow/Sleet and
    Freezing Rain
  • Valid from issuance time through end of event or
    72 hours max
  • For non Intermountain Region WFOs only
  • Watch/Warning Exceedance Potential Graphics
  • Shows by how much the ETAG exceeds watch/warning
    criteria
  • Separate graphics of both combined snow/sleet and
    freezing rain for both 12 and 24 hour thresholds
  • Not viable in the Intermountain region
  • Criteria by elevation does not allow this
    strategy to work
  • Low Tracks Graphic
  • HPC forecast of surface low position and track
    over the CONUS
  • Forecast of central pressure of low in 12 hour
    increments out through 72 hours
  • Clustering of available model solutions displayed
    on same map
  • 500 mb Heights Graphic

89
HPC Winter Weather Experiment Products
  • Products are available on WWE Web Site
  • http//hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/wwe
  • Password-protected to prevent general viewing of
    not-ready-for-prime-time products
  • Contact Pete Manousos (Peter.Manousos_at_noaa.gov)
    to obtain password to site

90
Winter Weather Products directly fromSREF
(graphical)
  • (Products on NAWIPS at HPC)
  • Probability of freezing rain for each 3, 6, 12
    and 24 hour period
  • Joint probability of freezing rain and PQPF
    exceeding specified criteria
  • Mean, maximum and minimum snow amounts and
    freezing rain for 3, 6, 12 and 24 hour periods

91
SREF case examples 31 Jan 2002
Probability of Snow
Probability of Freezing Rain
27 hour forecasts valid 12 UTC January 31
Dominant Precipitation Type
9AM Radar Jan. 31, 2002
92
SREF case examples 31 Jan 2002
9AM Satellite January 31, 2002
Wheres the rain-snow line?
93
SREF case examples 30 Dec 2000 (Millenium
Storm)
24 h accumulated precipitation Eta 36 h forecast
from 12 UTC 29 Dec 2000
SREF spaghetti diagram 24 h accum. precip gt 0.5
in 24 h fcst from 12 UTC 29 Dec 2000
  • Operational Eta forecast heavy snow across
  • Washington, D. C. and Baltimore metro areas and
  • southeast PA.
  • Most SREF members kept the heavy precipitation
    offshore
  • Official forecast Winter Storm Warning, 3-6
    DC, 5-10 Baltimore
  • Verification clear skies, no precipitation
    across DC/Baltimore/northern Maryland but
  • heavy snow fell from the northeast end of
    Philadelphia northeastward

94
6-7 JAN 2002, observed snowfall
SREF case examples 6-7 Jan 2002
95
SREF case examples 6-7 Jan 2002
3 h QPF 0.2
Sea-level pressure 1002 hPa
  • Spaghetti diagrams from SREF run just hours
  • before snowstorm began
  • Forecast heavy precip and forecast snow area do
    not intersect - no forecast of heavy snow!
  • Previous SREF runs had precip further south,
    hardly any where heavy snow verified
  • Why was SREF forecast so bad? Continue

Contours outline precip type snow
96
SREF case examples 6-7 Jan 2002
Raob wind, raob hght, analysis wind, hght
Notice winds in trough axis, especially sharpness
of observed vs. analysis wind shift and 100 knots
observed at Atlanta. Eta analysis just as bad
97
SREF case examples 6-7 Jan 2002
Every individual ensemble member initial
condition which includes perturbations, such as
the member shown here (labeled rsmp1), still did
not come close to matching the observed strength
and sharpness of the winds in the trough
axis When the analysis has large errors, even
ensemble perturbations wont include reality, and
forecast verification will lie outside the
ensemble envelope! Always look out for bad
analyses!
98
SREF case examples 6-7 Jan 2002
Convection over Gulf in sharp trough often
trouble for analysis!
99
RUC-20
  • 3D-VAR analysis implemented (yes it finally
    happened in May 2003)
  • See info on COMET NWP matrix page at
  • http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu2/index.htm and
    the
  • RUC page at http//maps.fsl.noaa.gov/ (esp.
    see online TPB)
  • Large improvement in error stats (precip, raobs,
    METARS, sensible weather, visibility, cloud
    patterns, everything!)
  • 2-level snow model
  • GOES cloud top assimilation, boundary layer
    profilers
  • many many model changes.
  • Still uses theta-sigma hybrid coordinate.

100
Expected Effects of New RUC 3-D Var
  • Slight improvement or about equal skill overall
    in 3-h and 12-h forecasts compared to those from
    the previous RUC OI analysis as verified against
    rawinsondes.
  • Closer fit to observations than the RUC OI
    analysis.
  • A smoother analysis increment (correction to 1-h
    forecast field) resulting in less noise in
    short-range forecasts.
  • Capability for assimilation of indirect
    observations such as radial winds, satellite
    radiances and wind speeds.

101
Precipitation Type in RUC
  • RUC Precip type is
  • not derived from the Baldwin-Schichtel algorithm
    used for Eta p-type grids
  • not always exactly the same as in the models
    microphysics, though its close
  • RUC Precip type output can be mixed (includes
    multiple types)
  • define surface T based on minimum orography,
    same as used for 2-meter temperatures fits METAR
    elevations more closely than topography used for
    dynamics and has deeper valleys
  • Includes rain when microphysics rain rate at
    ground is not too small and surface T gt 0oC
  • Includes freezing rain same as rain but surface
    T lt 0oC and at any higher level T gt 0oC
  • Includes sleet when microphysics graupel rate at
    ground is big enough and bigger than the snowfall
    rate at the ground and there is enough rainwater
    at some level and surface T lt 0oC
  • Includes snow when
  • Microphysics snowfall rate at ground is not
    exceedingly small, or
  • Microphysics graupel rate at ground is big
    enough but smaller than snowfall rate, or
  • Microphysics graupel rate at ground is big
    enough and 0oC lt surface T lt 2oC, or
  • Microphysics graupel rate at ground is big
    enough and there isnt much rainwater at any
    level
  • For details on RUC output variables, see
    http//ruc.fsl.noaa.gov/vartxt.html

102
RUC Land-surface Process Parameterization
  • Updated in 20 km for fall 2002 (last year)
  • change in thermal conductivity better diurnal
    cycle
  • frozen soil physics, 2-layer snow model

Purpose Improve near-sfc, precip, cloud
fcsts Ongoing cycle of soil moisture, soil temp,
snow cover/depth/temp)
2-layer snow model
103
RUC 2-layer snow model update
Problem Too cold temps at night (with clear
skies, low winds) over thin snow layer. Similar
to Eta patchy snow problem solved with crisis fix
Feb 02 Solution couple thin layer of soil
with thin layer of snow cover (implemented
October 2002)
7.5 cm
S n o w
2-layer snow model
4 cm
5 cm
S o i l
1-layer snow model
coupled snow-soil layer
104
TEMPERATURE OVER SNOW COVER comparison between
operational RUC experimental RUC w/thin snow fix
RUC 2-layer snow model update
Valid 1200 UTC 5 March 2002
Difference big here!
Control (21-h fcst)
Experimental Control difference
Observed
Control - 19 C Experiment - 10 C Observed
- 11 C (12 F)
Experimental (21-h fcst)
105
After thin snow fix, area of snow cover better
matches the NESDIS snow coverthough still not
perfect.
RUC 2-layer snow model update
RUC-40, old
RUC-20, new
10 February 2001 1500 UTC
More realistic snow cover with fix
106
Oct 2002 thin snow fix improves surface
temperature forecasts in areas with shallow snow
cover
RUC 2-layer snow model update
Bias results from 4-14 February 2001
with thin snow fix, reduced cold bias
Avg surface temp biases from 3-h fcst for
stations with snow depth lt 10 cm
Feb 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11
12 13 day
0 12 0 12 0 12 0
12 0 12 0 12 0 12
0 12 0 12 0 12 0 hour
with thin snow fix, reduced cold bias
Avg surface temp biases from 3-h fcst for
stations for all stations with snow cover
0 12 0 12 0 12 0
12 0 12 0 12 0 12
0 12 0 12 0 12 0 time
107
RUC good for light, fluffy snow cover
Remember the case shown in the Eta section when
thin snow melted early in the forecast period,
but not in the model, so Eta forecast 2-meter
temperatures were much too cold? Heres the same
case, RUC vs. Eta comparison. RUC did well.
RUC
Eta
3º-6ºC
10º-12ºC
108
  • COMET
  • Keeps you informed through the Eta and AVN
    newsgroups.
  • Read it like email, but it doesnt get mixed up
    with your
  • regular email
  • Post questions, get answers
  • Read questions from other forecasters
  • Traffic light, not too much to read
  • Discuss/explain important model error
    characteristics when
  • they are happening, timely information!
  • Start at http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/newsgroups/inde
    x.htm

109
COMET ensemble training
Ensemble Module at http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu1
/ensemble/ Coming soon, might be ready by the
time you read this Ensemble Forecasting
Powerpoint From WDTB Winter Weather Workshop,
July 2003 Two versions Condensed version
http//www.wdtb.noaa.gov/workshop/WinterWxIV/pres
entations/shortversionWintWxWkshp2003SJ.ppt Full
version http//www.wdtb.noaa.gov/workshop/Winter
WxIV/presentations/WintWxWkshp2003SJ.ppt
110
The COMET NWP Model Matrix
http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu2/
111
http//meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu3/cases/
More cases being added, some under development now
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