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Copyright © 2003 WGN-TV Computer Models are the Primary Source of Information for All Weather & Climate Predictions
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The Prediction Process Analyze Results Compare and Verify Observe the Atmosphere Identify and Apply Physical Laws Create a Mathematical Model Create and Run a Computer Model
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The Prediction Process Analyze Results Compare and Verify Observe the Atmosphere Identify and Apply Physical Laws Create a Mathematical Model Create and Run a Computer Model
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Observe the Atmosphere Upper-AirBalloons Satellites NEXRADDopplerRadar Commercial Aircraft AutomatedSurfaceNetworks
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The Prediction Process Analyze Results Compare and Verify Identify and Apply Physical Laws Create a Mathematical Model Create and Run a Computer Model Observe the Atmosphere
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Identify & Apply Physical Laws F=ma
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The Prediction Process Analyze Results Compare and Verify Create a Mathematical Model Create and Run a Computer Model Observe the Atmosphere Identify and Apply Physical Laws
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Create a Mathematical Model
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The Prediction Process Analyze Results Compare and Verify Create and Run a Computer Model Observe the Atmosphere Identify and Apply Physical Laws Create a Mathematical Model
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Create Computer Model
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n Solve highly nonlinear partial differential equations n East/West Wind n North/South Wind n Vertical Wind n Temperature n Water Vapor n Cloud Water n Precipitating Water n Cloud Ice n Graupel n Hail n Surface Temperature n Surface Moisture n Soil Temperature n Soil Moisture n Sub-Grid Turbulence Run the Computer Model
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n Over the course of a single forecast, the computer model solves billions of equations n Requires the fastest supercomputers in the world -- capable of performing quadrillions of calculations each second Run the Computer Model
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Computer Weather Prediction Began with a Vision in the early 1920s -- L.F. Richardson’s “Forecast Factory”
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Richardson’s Forecast Grid – Predictions Done by Hand 25 point mesh! One Level Grid Spacing = 250 km
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The Vision Becomes Reality… ENIAC
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ENIAC Versus Today n Weighed 30 tons n Had 18,000 vacuum tubes, 1,500 relays thousands of resistors, capacitors, inductors n Peak speed of 5000 adds/second and 300 multiplies/sec n A 1.2 GHz Pentium IV processor is 500,000 times faster than the ENIAC n A desktop PC with 1 Gbyte of RAM can store 5 million times as much data as the ENIAC
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n Done on ENIAC: 1.2 million times slower than my laptop n Numerically integrated one equation at one altitude n 736 km grid spacing n 24 hour forecast took 24 hours to compute! n Forecast below up due to lack of smoothing of data – but rerun today, it was ok! 450 Miles 1950: The First Computer Weather Forecast Model
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…And Things Have Been Improving Ever Since
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Supercell Storms – The Big Tornado Producers! n Occur most often during spring n Isolated and very intense n Updraft rotates in the vertical direction n Can last for a few hours
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Structure of a Supercell Storm Updraft Downdraft
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Schematic Diagram of a Supercell Storm (C. Doswell)
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Structure of a Supercell Storm
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A Supercell on NEXRAD Doppler Radar n Hook Echo
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Starting with Simulation
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Early Contour Plot of Horizontal Wind from 3-D Simulation Courtesy R. Wilhelmson, University of Illinois
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Early “Animation” of a 3-D Simulation Courtesy R. Wilhelmson, University of Illinois
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3-D Structure Based on Trajectories Courtesy R. Wilhelmson, University of Illinois
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Pipe Cleaner Perspective! Courtesy R. Wilhelmson, University of Illinois
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Computer-Generated Pipe Cleaners! Courtesy R. Wilhelmson, University of Illinois
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Where Does the Rotation Come From? Courtesy NCAR
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To the Dome!!
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Today’s State-of-the-Art Computer Forecast
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The Real Atmosphere
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Why the Lack of Detail in the Model? This Thunderstorm Falls Through the Cracks
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A Foundational Question... explicitly predict this type of weather? Can computer forecast technology...
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The Billion Dollar Question: Will Computer Models Ever Be Able to Predict Tornadoes?
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Current: Warn-on-Detection NSSL Warn on Forecast Briefing March 5, 2007, Courtesy R. Schneider Hazard Based Tornado Warning n 30% Developing Thunderstorm
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Vision: Warn-on-Forecast Developing thunderstorm Most Likely Tornado Path T=2120 CST T=2150 T=2130 T=2140 T=2200 CST 70% 50% 30% NSSL Warn on Forecast Briefing March 5, 2007, Courtesy R. Schneider Most Likely Tornado Path T=2120 CST T=2150 T=2130 T=2140 T=2200 CST 70% 50% 30%
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Hurricanes vs Tornadoes?
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What May be Impossible to Predict!
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