The Operational Use and Assessment of a Layered Precipitable Water Product for Weather Forecasting

被引:0
|
作者
Leroy, Anita [1 ]
Fuell, Kevin K. [1 ]
Molthan, Andrew L. [2 ]
Jedlovec, Gary J. [2 ]
Forsythe, John M. [3 ]
Kidder, Stanley Q. [3 ]
Jones, Andrew S. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alabama, NASA Short Term Predict Res & Transit Ctr, Huntsville, AL 35899 USA
[2] NASA Short Term Predict Res & Transit Ctr, Huntsville, AL USA
[3] Colorado State Univ, Cooperat Inst Res Atmosphere, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Operational forecasters have a variety of new research products and tools to interrogate precipitation systems for different environments and precipitation regimes. One such product is satellite-derived, column-total precipitable water retrieved in discrete layers as an experimental product developed by the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA), and transitioned by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Short-term Prediction, Research, and Transition Center to numerous weather forecast offices (WFOs) to address specific forecast issues. In 2013 the CIRA layered precipitable water (LPW) product was formally assessed by National Weather Service WFOs in Alaska, the West Coast of the United States, and San Juan, Puerto Rico. Forecasters used LPW to address forecast challenges associated with atmospheric rivers, convective storms, and other types of precipitation events across diverse forecasting domains ranging from marine zones to complex topography. This paper describes the use of LPW by operational forecasters at their WFOs and shows the impact LPW had on precipitation forecasting, as determined by assessment results. During 72 formal user feedback submissions and multiple assessment periods, 62.5% of forecasters had high confidence in LPW. Fifty percent stated that LPW had a "large" impact on their decision process, and another 22.2% said LPW had "some" impact. For 76.4% of the events surveyed, forecasters stated that LPW had "large" to "very large" value over traditional total precipitable water products. Individual case examples will provide a context for forecasters' evaluation of the product in their county warning area.
引用
收藏
页码:22 / 33
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] RECENT PROGRESS IN THE OPERATIONAL FORECASTING OF SUMMER SEVERE WEATHER
    JOE, P
    CROZIER, C
    DONALDSON, N
    ETKIN, D
    BRUN, E
    CLODMAN, S
    ABRAHAM, J
    SIOK, S
    BIRON, HP
    LEDUC, M
    CHADWICK, P
    KNOTT, S
    ARCHIBALD, J
    VICKERS, G
    BLACKWELL, S
    DROUILLARD, R
    WHITMAN, A
    BROOKS, H
    KOUWEN, N
    VERRET, R
    FOURNIER, G
    KOCHTUBAJDA, B
    ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN, 1995, 33 (02) : 249 - 302
  • [22] The Impact of Data Latency on Operational Global Weather Forecasting
    Casey, Sean P. F.
    Cucurull, Lidia
    WEATHER AND FORECASTING, 2022, 37 (07) : 1211 - 1220
  • [23] Operational quantitative precipitation forecasting at the German Weather Service
    Damrath, U
    Doms, G
    Frühwald, D
    Heise, E
    Richter, B
    Steppeler, J
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2000, 239 (1-4) : 260 - 285
  • [24] Assessment of the night weather parameters and their use in forecasting model of leaf rust
    El Jarroudi, M.
    Giraud, F.
    Delfosse, P.
    Hoffmann, L.
    Maraite, H.
    Tychon, B.
    PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2010, 100 (06) : S32 - S33
  • [25] The Importance of Ensemble Techniques for Operational Space Weather Forecasting
    Murray, Sophie A.
    SPACE WEATHER-THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, 2018, 16 (07): : 777 - 783
  • [26] Development of a SeaWinds wind product for weather forecasting
    Portabella, M
    Stoffelen, A
    de Vries, J
    IGARSS 2001: SCANNING THE PRESENT AND RESOLVING THE FUTURE, VOLS 1-7, PROCEEDINGS, 2001, : 1076 - 1078
  • [27] National Weather Service (NWS) Forecasters' Perceptions of AI/ML and Its Use in Operational Forecasting
    Wirz, Christopher D.
    Demuth, Julie L.
    Cains, Mariana G.
    White, Miranda
    Radford, Jacob
    Bostrom, Ann
    BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2024, 105 (11) : E2194 - E2215
  • [28] Constructing a precipitable water vapor map from regional GNSS network observations without collocated meteorological data for weather forecasting
    Chen, Biyan
    Dai, Wujiao
    Liu, Zhizhao
    Wu, Lixin
    Kuang, Cuilin
    Ao, Minsi
    ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2018, 11 (09) : 5153 - 5166
  • [29] Comparison of short-period daytime convective rainfall accumulations with total column precipitable water: Derivation of an operational forecasting technique
    Young, Martin
    Lamb, Daniel
    Lane, Andrew
    Lattimore, Chris
    METEOROLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2020, 27 (02)
  • [30] History of operational use of weather radar by US weather services
    Whiton, RC
    Smith, PL
    Bigler, SG
    Wilk, KE
    Harbuck, AC
    28TH CONFERENCE ON RADAR METEOROLOGY, 1997, : 303 - 308