FACETs: A Proposed Next-Generation Paradigm for High-Impact Weather Forecasting

Author:

Rothfusz Lans P.1,Schneider Russell2,Novak David3,Klockow-McClain Kimberly4,Gerard Alan E.1,Karstens Chris2,Stumpf Gregory J.5,Smith Travis M.4

Affiliation:

1. NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, Oklahoma

2. NOAA/NWS/SPC, Norman, Oklahoma

3. NOAA/NWS/WPC, College Park, Maryland

4. Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, University of Oklahoma, and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, Oklahoma

5. NOAA/NWS/MDL, Norman, Oklahoma

Abstract

AbstractRecommendations by the National Research Council (NRC), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and Weather-Ready Nation workshop participants have encouraged the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the broader weather enterprise to explore and expand the use of probabilistic information to convey weather forecast uncertainty. Forecasting a Continuum of Environmental Threats (FACETs) is a concept being explored by NOAA to address those recommendations and also potentially shift the National Weather Service (NWS) from (primarily) teletype-era, deterministic watch–warning products to high-resolution, probabilistic hazard information (PHI) spanning periods from days (and longer) to within minutes of high-impact weather and water events. FACETs simultaneously i) considers a reinvention of the NWS hazard forecasting and communication paradigm so as to deliver multiscale, user-specific probabilistic guidance from numerical weather prediction ensembles and ii) provides a comprehensive framework to organize the physical, social, and behavioral sciences, the technology, and the practices needed to achieve that reinvention. The first applications of FACETs have focused on thunderstorm phenomena, but the FACETs concept is envisioned to extend to the attributes of any environmental hazards that can be described probabilistically (e.g., winter, tropical, and aviation weather). This paper introduces the FACETs vision, the motivation for its creation, the research and development under way to explore that vision, its relevance to operational forecasting and society, and possible strategies for implementation.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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