Author:
Hu Weiming,Cervone Guido,Young George,Delle Monache Luca
Abstract
AbstractNumerical weather prediction models and high-performance computing have significantly improved our ability to model near-surface variables, but their uncertainty quantification still remains a challenging task. Ensembles are usually produced to depict a series of possible future states of the atmosphere, as a means to quantify the prediction uncertainty, but this requires multiple instantiation of the model, leading to an increased computational cost. Weather analogs, alternatively, can be used to generate ensembles without repeated model runs. The analog ensemble (AnEn) is a technique to identify similar weather patterns for near-surface variables and quantify forecast uncertainty. Analogs are chosen based on a similarity metric that calculates the weighted multivariate Euclidean distance. However, identifying optimal weights for similarity metric becomes a bottleneck because it involves performing a constrained exhaustive search. As a result, only a few predictors were selected and optimized in previous AnEn studies. A new machine learning similarity metric is proposed to improve the theoretical framework on how weather analogs are identified. First, a deep learning network is trained to generate latent features using all the temporal multivariate input predictors. Analogs are then selected in this latent space, rather than the original predictor space. The proposed method does not require prior predictor selection and an exhaustive search, thus presenting a significant computational benefit and scalability. It is tested for surface wind speed and solar irradiance forecasts in Pennsylvania from 2017 to 2019. Results show that the proposed method is capable of handling a large number of predictors, and it outperforms the original similarity metric in RMSE, bias, and CRPS. Since the data-driven transformation network is trained using the historical record, the proposed method has been found to be more flexible for searching through a longer record.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
4 articles.
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