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The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble

The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble. David Richardson Met Office, Exeter. Contents. The presentation covers the following sections. Global Interactive Forecast System concept The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble (TIGGE) 1 st TIGGE Workshop Future plans

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The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble

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  1. The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble David Richardson Met Office, Exeter

  2. Contents The presentation covers the following sections • Global Interactive Forecast System concept • The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble (TIGGE) • 1st TIGGE Workshop • Future plans • Links to Pacific Experiment

  3. Traditional forecast system observations Assimilation Forecast users

  4. Global Interactive Forecast System Forecaster runs ‘sensitive area’ prediction Initial risk from medium-range global ensemble Forecaster requests observations in sensitive area Forecaster requests high resolution regional ensemble Initiate and maintain links with civil protection agencies

  5. Global Interactive Forecast System (GIFS) A concept for future weather prediction Global • Global participation, global application, global and regional models Interactive • observation-assimilation-forecast-user: all parts of system integrated, adaptive, interactive. Changes according to situation and user needs. We cannot say now what a future Global Interactive Forecast System will be – a goal of THORPEX is to determine this The development, evaluation and testing of a future GIFS will depend on results from all four components of THORPEX

  6. THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble (TIGGE) • Framework for international collaboration in development and testing of ensemble prediction systems • Resource for THORPEX research projects • Component of THORPEX Forecast Demonstration Projects (FDPs) • A prototype future Global Interactive Forecast System • Initially develop database of available ensembles, collected in near-real time • Co-ordinate research using this multi-model ensemble data, including interactive aspects

  7. TIGGE Workshop • Workshop: 1-3 March 2005, ECMWF • Address strategy to achieve TIGGE objectives • Focus on user-requirements and infrastructure needed to meet these • Produce outline plan and timetable • 60 participants from operational centres and universities worldwide • Report submitted to THORPEX Executive Board and International Core Steering Committee • www.wmo.int/thorpex/publications.html

  8. TIGGE Workshop: aims Predictability science Real-world applications • Aim: Define user-requirement for TIGGE data • Users • Who? • What for? • How? • When? • Requirements • What data? • Format? • How to access? • Contributors NHMS academic End user ??? EPS 1 EPS 2 EPS n

  9. TIGGE infrastructure Phase 1 Predictability science Real-world applications • Data collected in near-real time (via internet ftp) at central TIGGE data archives • Can be implemented now at little cost • Can handle current data volumes within available network and storage capabilities NHMS academic End user TIGGE Centre A TIGGE Centre B EPS 1 EPS 2 EPS n

  10. TIGGE infrastructure Phase 2 Predictability science Real-world applications • Data distributed over several repositories • But keep efficient and transparent user access • Flexible – minimise data transfers • Needs substantial software development • Coordination with WMO Information System • Requires additional funding NHMS academic End user Portal to distributed (virtual) archive EPS 1 EPS 2 EPS n

  11. Access and use of TIGGE data Aims for TIGGE data policy: • TIGGE data available to all users for research purposes (efficient approval for data access) • User-friendly interface for access to the central archives (including for subsets of ensemble data) • Promote open-source sharing of post-processing software (calibration, combination, decision-making) to maximise benefit for both researchers and end-users • Address issue of real-time access to data, in particular for demonstration projects and field experiments

  12. TIGGE Plans • Phase 1: • Central TIGGE archives: ECMWF (NCAR, CMA) • For ECMWF: funded within existing resources • Technical plan: July 2005 • Initial infrastructure development: Jan 2006 • Early 2006: TIGGE data archives will begin collecting available ensemble contributions in near-real time • 2007-08: TIGGE available for THORPEX support to demonstration projects (IPY, Beijing 2008 Olympics regional EPS, Pacific THORPEX Experiment) • Phase 2: • distributed archive • Coordinate with WMO Information System plans • ECMWF will lead bid for FP6 funding

  13. TIGGE and Pacific Predictability Experiment • Predictability studies – inter-comparison of different available ensemble systems • Are all models equally poor over W N America? • Are better models still relatively worse here than elsewhere? • Are analyses relatively worse over Pacific? • Does better use of satellite data improve performance? • Is predictability intrinsically low? • How important is model error?

  14. TIGGE and Pacific Predictability Experiment • Predictability studies – inter-comparison of different available ensemble systems • Field campaign support • Real-time access to global TIGGE ensemble forecasts • Advance warning of potential significant events • Sensitive area predictions incorporated in TIGGE infrastructure (some SAP also directly use TIGGE ensembles) • Regional ensembles • Boundary conditions from global TIGGE ensembles • Regional ensembles into TIGGE archives • Co-ordinated inter-comparison of performance • Global TIGGE predictions of when to run regional/mesoscale ensembles

  15. Northern hemisphere 500 hPa ACC • Impact of removing most in-situ observations • COMB • operational Met Office system • BASE • All satellite data • GUAN radiosonde • GSN land stations (pressure only) • Ocean buoy data (no ships)

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