01 Introduction
01 Introduction
01 Introduction
ENVI1400 : 10 Credits
Email: [email protected] Office : room 3.25 School of Earth & Environment (Environment Building)
ENVI1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 1 2
Reading List
Core Texts:
Atmosphere, Weather & Climate. Barry, Roger G., and Chorley, Richard J; Routledge, 2003.
Chapters 3, 4, and 5 particularly relevant.
Meteorology Today: An Introduction to Weather, Climate, and The Environment, Ahrens, C. Donald; Thomson/Brooks/Cole, 2003.
http://www.metoffice.com/education/index.html
Guides to interpretation of charts and imagery, and access to some current data
http://www.weather.org.uk/
A wide variety of current meteorological data, analysis and forecast charts, etc. Links to lots of other sites.
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/topkarten/fsfaxsem.html
Analysis and forecast charts for Europe from a variety of agencies and models (including UK Met Office)
http://grads.iges.org/pix/euro.fcst.html
Analysis & forecast charts for Europe issued by National Centers for Environmental Prediction.
http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary
Glossary of Meteorology from the American Meteorological Society
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Course Outline
10 Lectures (Monday 12-1, Parkinson B10)
Introduce basic concepts of meteorology Emphasis on physical processes not theoretical or mathematical treatments
~8 x 1-hour workshops
(Thursday 2-3 Parkinson B11)
2002-01-31 12:05
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Weather
The state of the atmosphere; mainly with respect to its effects upon human activities. Short term variability of the atmosphere (time scales of minutes to months). Popularly thought of in terms of: temperature, wind, humidity, precipitation, cloudiness, brightness, and visibility. A category of individual/combined atmospheric phenomena which describe the conditions at the time of an observation.
Climate
Long term statistical description of the atmospheric conditions, averaged over a specified period of time usually decades.
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Commerce
Should a supermarket order BBQs and icecream, or umbrellas?
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Precipitation?
Type, amount, location
Visibility
Fog, haze
Humidity
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In practice
3-5 days is the limit of reasonable quantitative forecasts. Medium-range forecasts (5-10) days are made, but limited to large-scale pressure field and winds, NOT detailed conditions.
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Methods of Forecasting
Persistence Method:
Tomorrow will be much the same as today
Todays Weather
Tomorrows Forecast
Works well when conditions change only slowly. Also surprisingly effective for general forecasts of periods >10 days, for which most other more advanced methods lose all their skill. Several weeks of hot sunny weather often followed by several more.
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Statistical methods
Simple statistics: climatology
Given a long record of past weather on every day of the year, forecast most frequently observed weather for day of interest.
Works well, provided the general conditions are similar to the usual or most common conditions for the time of year. Requires long records many years to provide reasonable statistics
Analog method
Given a long record of the sequence of weather conditions, look for a past sequence that resembles the last few days to weeks, and forecast whatever followed it.
Difficult to use effectively because of difficulty in finding a close match between current and past conditions. Again, requires records going back many years.
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Trends:
Estimate the speed at which features fronts, pressure centres, etc are moving. Allows estimation of time of arrival. Requires measurements over a wide area. Applied over a period of a few hours this method is called NowCasting. Very effective use of rainfall radar imagery.
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Physical Understanding
An extensive set of measurements over a wide area, coupled with an understanding of the physical processes allows general conditions to be assessed and forecasts to be made for a wide area a day or two ahead.
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Physical Processes
Thermal atmospheric dynamics are ultimately driven by temperature gradients arising from uneven solar heating Pressure gradient forces immediate cause of horizontal motions Moisture effect of water vapour content on air density, and release of latent heat has a major impact on convection
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First numerical forecast made in 1922 by Lewis Fry Richardson. Took several months, calculating by hand, to produce a 6-hour forecast.
It failedbadly!
But, it demonstrated the means of producing quantitative forecasts. Its failure has since been shown to be due to the limited understanding of some atmospheric processes at the time.
L. F. Richardsons computational grid: Pressure is determined in squares marked P, momentum in those marked M.
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First successful forecast: 1950 by Jule Charney, Fjrtoft, and von Neumann, using ENIAC. A 24-hour forecast took 33 days to produce, working day and night.
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Meteo-France
MetOffice
Modern forecast models include the whole globe at a horizontal resolution of up to ~1 (~111km). Region of interest modelled at ~10km resolution.
Forecasts made every 12 or 24 hours for 0000 and 1200 GMT (sometimes 0600 and 1800) for up to 5 days ahead.
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Summary
Meteorology is important to a wide variety of activities A huge array of meteorological information is freely available With a basic understanding of the physical processes involved YOU can make timely and accurate forecasts
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