Scientific Challenges of Convective-Scale Numerical Weather Prediction

Author:

Yano Jun-Ichi1,Ziemiański Michał Z.2,Cullen Mike3,Termonia Piet4,Onvlee Jeanette5,Bengtsson Lisa6,Carrassi Alberto7,Davy Richard7,Deluca Anna8,Gray Suzanne L.9,Homar Víctor10,Köhler Martin11,Krichak Simon12,Michaelides Silas13,Phillips Vaughan T. J.14,Soares Pedro M. M.15,Wyszogrodzki Andrzej A.2

Affiliation:

1. CNRM, CNRS and Météo-France, Toulouse, France

2. Institute of Meteorology and Water Management, National Research Institute, Warsaw, Poland

3. Met Office, Exeter, United Kingdom

4. Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium

5. KNMI, De Bilt, Netherlands

6. NOAA/CIRES, Boulder, Colorado

7. NERSC, Bergen, Norway

8. Institut Catal de Cincies del Clima, Barcelona, Spain

9. University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom

10. Universidad de les Islas Baleares, Palma, Spain

11. DWD, Offenbach, Germany

12. Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

13. Cyprus Institute, Nicosia, and Cyprus University of Technology, Limassol, Cyprus

14. University of Lund, Lund, Sweden

15. Instituto Dom Luiz, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal

Abstract

AbstractAfter extensive efforts over the course of a decade, convective-scale weather forecasts with horizontal grid spacings of 1–5 km are now operational at national weather services around the world, accompanied by ensemble prediction systems (EPSs). However, though already operational, the capacity of forecasts for this scale is still to be fully exploited by overcoming the fundamental difficulty in prediction: the fully three-dimensional and turbulent nature of the atmosphere. The prediction of this scale is totally different from that of the synoptic scale (103 km), with slowly evolving semigeostrophic dynamics and relatively long predictability on the order of a few days.Even theoretically, very little is understood about the convective scale compared to our extensive knowledge of the synoptic-scale weather regime as a partial differential equation system, as well as in terms of the fluid mechanics, predictability, uncertainties, and stochasticity. Furthermore, there is a requirement for a drastic modification of data assimilation methodologies, physics (e.g., microphysics), and parameterizations, as well as the numerics for use at the convective scale. We need to focus on more fundamental theoretical issues—the Liouville principle and Bayesian probability for probabilistic forecasts—and more fundamental turbulence research to provide robust numerics for the full variety of turbulent flows.The present essay reviews those basic theoretical challenges as comprehensibly as possible. The breadth of the problems that we face is a challenge in itself: an attempt to reduce these into a single critical agenda should be avoided.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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