Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Page 1© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Forecasting uncertainty: the ensemble solution Mike Keil, Ken Mylne,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Page 1© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Forecasting uncertainty: the ensemble solution Mike Keil, Ken Mylne,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Page 1© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Forecasting uncertainty: the ensemble solution Mike Keil, Ken Mylne, Richard Swinbank and Camilla Mathison Data Assimilation and Ensembles, Met R&D, Met Office ESSWIII, 13-17 November 2006, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels.

2 Page 2© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Outline  Introduction to Ensemble Forecasting  Perturbing analyses/models  Examples of probability forecasts  Application to space weather

3 Page 3© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Weather forecasting  Today’s NWP systems are one of the great scientific achievements of the 20 th Century, but…  Forecasts still go wrong!  16-17 Oct '87 – still difficult with today’s systems  Less severe errors are much more common, especially in medium-range forecasts  What causes errors in forecasts?  Analysis errors  Model errors and approximations  Unresolved processes

4 Page 4© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Ensemble Forecasts  Small errors grow and limit the useful forecast range.  By running an ensemble of many model forecasts with small differences in initial conditions and model formulation we can:  take account of uncertainty  sample the distribution of forecast states  estimate probabilities  Ensembles turn weather forecasts into Risk Management tools

5 Page 5© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Ensemble forecasts time Forecast uncertainty Climatology Initial Condition Uncertainty X Deterministic Forecast Analysis X Deterministic Forecast Forecast uncertainty

6 Page 6© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Adding perturbations

7 Page 7© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 IC perturbations: ensemble spread Time Deterministic forecast, with increments each analysis cycle Ensemble forecast - spread increases, reflecting chaotic dynamics and model error Ensemble spread is a measure of forecast error After each analysis, spread is reduced, because of new information from observations data assimilation creates a new analysis Forecast phase

8 Page 8© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 The Met Office has three schemes to address different sources of model error:  Error due to approximations in parameterisations  Random Parameters (RP)  Unresolved impact of organised convection  Stochastic Convective Vorticity (SCV)  Excess dissipation of energy at small scales  Stochastic Kinetic Energy Backscatter (SKEB) Model perturbations: stochastic physics

9 Page 9© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Examples

10 Page 10© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Ensembles – estimating risk By running models many times with small differences we can:  take account of uncertainty  estimate probabilities and risks  eg. 10 members out of 50 = 20%

11 Page 11© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Example: Early Warnings of Severe Weather Met Office issues Early Warnings up to 5 days ahead - when probability  60% of disruption due to:  Severe Gales  Heavy rain  Heavy Snow  Forecasters provided with alerts and guidance from ensembles  Challenges:  Severe events not fully resolved  Few events so difficult to verify

12 Page 12© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Katrina – from “operational” system

13 Page 13© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Katrina – NHC warning

14 Page 14© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Courtesy of Robert Mureau, KNMI.

15 Page 15© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 End-to End Outcome Forecasting  An ensemble weather forecast can be used to drive an ensemble of outcome models, eg:  Wind power output  Energy demand  Hydrology – flood risk  Ship or aircraft routes

16 Page 16© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Application to space weather

17 Page 17© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Application to SW: power supply  Forecasts of disruption to power distribution  High degree of uncertainly  Longer timescales  Ensemble thinking can help!  A variety of perturbations can be applied to models  Inputs – the behaviour of the sun  Model parameters – known weaknesses

18 Page 18© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Power disruption probability Information of this kind can be useful to customers Critical thresholds can aid planning decisions: rescheduling grid maintenance load reduction

19 Page 19© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 There’s a 50% prob of snow in London tomorrow 50% ? You mean you don’t know what will happen! Probabilities in context - a warning Probabilities need to be explained properly Normally it only snows one day in 50 at this time of year - so 50% is a strong signal. Probabilities must be unambiguous and relevant to the end user When’s this talk going to end?

20 Page 20© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Summary  Utilising ensembles is now a mature tool in operational weather forecasting  Ensembles provide extra information on  Uncertainty  Risks, particularly for high impact weather  We are learning how to use probability forecasts for improved decision-making  These ideas are being now considered in space weather forecasting  Power supply disruption  Applicable to other areas

21 Page 21© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Questions

22 Page 22© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Met Office Operations Centre Ops Centre forecaster uses the ensemble to assess the most probable outcome before creating the medium-range forecast charts… …and assess risks


Download ppt "Page 1© Crown copyright 2006ESWWIII, Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Nov 15 th 2006 Forecasting uncertainty: the ensemble solution Mike Keil, Ken Mylne,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google