Improvements to the Operational Tropical Cyclone Wind Speed Probability Model

Author:

DeMaria Mark1,Knaff John A.1,Brennan Michael J.2,Brown Daniel2,Knabb Richard D.2,DeMaria Robert T.3,Schumacher Andrea3,Lauer Christopher A.4,Roberts David P.5,Sampson Charles R.6,Santos Pablo7,Sharp David8,Winters Katherine A.9

Affiliation:

1. NOAA/NESDIS, Fort Collins, Colorado

2. NOAA/NWS/NCEP/NHC, Miami, Florida

3. Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

4. NOAA/NWS/NCEP/SWPC, Boulder, Colorado

5. Fleet Weather Center, Norfolk, Virginia, and NOAA/NWS/NCEP/NHC, Miami, Florida

6. NRL, Monterey, California

7. NWS, Miami, Florida

8. NWS, Melbourne, Florida

9. 45th Weather Squadron, Patrick Air Force Base, Florida

Abstract

Abstract The National Hurricane Center Hurricane Probability Program, which estimated the probability of a tropical cyclone passing within a specific distance of a selected set of coastal stations, was replaced by the more general Tropical Cyclone Surface Wind Speed Probabilities in 2006. A Monte Carlo (MC) method is used to estimate the probabilities of 34-, 50-, and 64-kt (1 kt = 0.51 m s−1) winds at multiple time periods through 120 h. Versions of the MC model are available for the Atlantic, the combined eastern and central North Pacific, and the western North Pacific. This paper presents a verification of the operational runs of the MC model for the period 2008–11 and describes model improvements since 2007. The most significant change occurred in 2010 with the inclusion of a method to take into account the uncertainty of the track forecasts on a case-by-case basis, which is estimated from the spread of a dynamical model ensemble and other parameters. The previous version represented the track uncertainty from the error distributions from the previous 5 yr of forecasts from the operational centers, with no case-to-case variability. Results show the MC model provides robust estimates of the wind speed probabilities using a number of standard verification metrics, and that the inclusion of the case-by-case measure of track uncertainty improved the probability estimates. Beginning in 2008, an older operational wind speed probability table product was modified to include information from the MC model. This development and a verification of the new version of the table are described.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference11 articles.

1. Cangialosi, J. P., and J. L.Franklin, 2011: 2010 National Hurricane Center forecast verification report. NHC, 77 pp. [Available online at http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/verification/pdfs/Verification_2010.pdf.]

2. A new method for estimating tropical cyclone wind speed probabilities;DeMaria;Wea. Forecasting,2009

3. Prediction of consensus tropical cyclone track forecast error;Goerss;Mon. Wea. Rev.,2007

4. Hypothesis tests for evaluating numerical precipitation forecasts;Hamill;Wea. Forecasting,1999

5. Global ensemble predictions of 2009's tropical cyclones initialized with an ensemble Kalman filter;Hamill;Mon. Wea. Rev.,2011

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