Abstract
Abstract. Quantitative precipitation nowcasting (QPN) has become an
essential technique in various application contexts, such as early warning or
urban sewage control. A common heuristic prediction approach is to track the
motion of precipitation features from a sequence of weather radar images and
then to displace the precipitation field to the imminent future (minutes to
hours) based on that motion, assuming that the intensity of the features
remains constant (“Lagrangian persistence”). In that context, “optical
flow” has become one of the most popular tracking techniques. Yet the
present landscape of computational QPN models still struggles with producing
open software implementations. Focusing on this gap, we have developed and
extensively benchmarked a stack of models based on different optical flow
algorithms for the tracking step and a set of parsimonious extrapolation
procedures based on image warping and advection. We demonstrate that these
models provide skillful predictions comparable with or even superior to
state-of-the-art operational software. Our software library (“rainymotion”)
for precipitation nowcasting is written in the Python programming language
and openly available at GitHub (https://github.com/hydrogo/rainymotion,
Ayzel et al., 2019). That way,
the library may serve as a tool for providing fast, free, and transparent
solutions that could serve as a benchmark for further model development and
hypothesis testing – a benchmark that is far more advanced than the
conventional benchmark of Eulerian persistence commonly used in QPN
verification experiments.
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