Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEugenia Gregory Modified over 9 years ago
1
Hydrology in the National Weather Service Mark Fuchs Service Hydrologist National Weather Service St. Louis, MO Presentation to local Media Partners November 16, 2013
2
Define flooding and hydrology Describe factors that contribute to flooding and define flooding categories Describe the CHPS and the hydrologic forecast process at the RFCs Provide an overview of the Advanced Hydrological Prediction Service (AHPS) resources and 90-day streamflow outlook tools Provide additional NWS resource locations Objectives
3
Growing Demand for Water Information
4
Flash Flood – a rapid and extreme flow of high water into a normally dry area, or a rapid water level rise in a stream or creek above a predetermined flood level, beginning within six hours of the causative event (e.g., intense rainfall, dam failure, ice jam). Flood – high flow, overflow, or inundation by water which causes or threatens damage. Flood vs. Flash Flood
5
Pre-season water levels Received precipitation/snowfall Air/ground temperature Soil moisture Ice Jams Snowpack/snow melt Factors Contributing to a Flood
6
Action Stage: Water is near or over the top of its banks in spots, but no structures are flooded; any flooding is typically limited to parkland and marshland. Minor Flood Stage: Few buildings are expected to be inundated, roads, parklands and yards may be covered with water and water may go under buildings on stilts or higher elevations. Moderate Flood Stage: Inundation of buildings, roads closed and/or cut off. Some evacuations may be necessary. Major Flood Stage: Significant to catastrophic, life-threatening flooding is expected. Extensive flooding with some low-lying areas completely inundated. Structures may be completely submerged. Large-scale evacuations may be necessary. Flood Categories
7
NWS USACE USGS NWS – Forecasts USACE – Engineering and Reservoirs USGS – River observations and measurements
8
USGS and USACE river gauges
9
USACE water control
10
NWS Operations Average Person Only Sees Tip of Iceberg Private Weather Companies Internet Radio TV NWR 122 Weather Forecast Offices 9 National Centers for Environmental Prediction 13 River Forecast Centers Radar Network Satellites Weather Balloons Ground-Level Observations Data Buoys Climate and Seasonal Outlooks Volunteer Network Model Simulations Aviation & Ocean Forecasts Severe Thunderstorm and Tornado Prediction Space Weather Forecasts Hurricane Forecasts Government Stream Gauge Network River Forecasts 90-day outlooks
11
11 NWS Operations Presence at National, Regional and Local Levels
12
NWS River Forecasts
13
NWS River Forecast Centers www.water.weather.gov/ahps/rfc/rfc.php
14
Three River Forecast Centers serve the St. Louis Service Area 14 MBRFC NCRFC LMRFC
15
FC FEWS National Weather Service Northeast River Forecast Center 15 CHPS: Community Hydrologic Prediction System FEWS Models NWS Models HEC Models Other Models CHPS
16
CHPS NERFC – Alternative data views CHPS: Providing the forecaster an interface to data Intuitive graphical interfaces Lots of map support Highly configurable views CHPS NCRFC – flood status in several catchments
17
CHPS: Data visualization and editing – Graphical data Powerful graphical tools for viewing time series data Point time series Longitudinal profiles (animated) Editing capabilities – copy to- from e.g. Excel Historical event: River Rouge, Detroit Longitudinal Display
18
CHPS: Using and displaying probabilistic data Import ensemble data (e.g. ECMWF, GFS, NAM) Run models for ensemble members Results – Statistical Summary – Verification The CHPS database model is inherently ensemble-aware Model #2 for 31-05-2007 00:00 UTC Model #1 for 31-05-2007 00:00 UTC
19
Hydrologic Forecast Process Modeling how much rain gets into the river (Rainfall to Runoff) Modeling snowmelt runoff (Snow model) Modeling how fast water gets to the river gage (Unit Hydrograph) Modeling how fast upstream water arrives at the gage (Routing) Translating water volume into water height (Rating)
20
Soil Moisture Conditions
21
Accumulated snow and ice pack
22
Observed Precipitation
23
Forecast Precipitation
24
Rainfall to Runoff Modeling
25
Unit Hydrograph Meramec River near Steelville, Missouri Flow (cfs)
26
Routing Time Gage Height
28
River Forecasts – How are they created? Observed Precipitation Observed Precipitation Future Precipitation Future Precipitation Soil Model Rainfall to Runoff Soil Model Rainfall to Runoff Local Basin Rating Curve Flow to Stage Rating Curve Flow to Stage Unit Hydrograph Runoff to Flow Unit Hydrograph Runoff to Flow Upstream Flow Upstream River Gage Basin Local Flow Total Flow (cfs) Total Flow (cfs) Forecaster Modification Forecaster Modification Forecast To Public Forecast To Public Forecast River Gage
29
Forecast Considerations Ground State (How dry is it?) Past Model Performances Rainfall (Gage-based or Radar-based?) Rainfall Variability Space Time
30
Rainfall Variability
35
RFC Products and Services
36
WFO Products and Services
37
These graphical products are useful planning tools. Enable users to make more informed decision about policies and actions to mitigate the dangers posed by floods and droughts. New feature demo AHPS
38
River Forecasts
39
Impacts What constitutes impacts? – Flooded cropland and parks – Flooded roadways – Damaged storage buildings and garages – Businesses and residences – Levee breaches vs. overtopping – Navigational issues – Water intake problems Defined as any water level disrupting human activity.
40
Impacts
41
Low Flow and Impacts
42
Experimental Long-Range River Flood Risk
43
Probability Outlooks
45
Spring Outlooks
46
December 2013 – February 2014
48
Resources www.water.weather.gov www.weather.gov www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov www.nohrsc.nws.gov
49
Questions
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.