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On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma January 14, 2004 January 14, 2004 Where Americas Climate and Weather Services Begin

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Model (or Best Member) of the Day Can a “best member” be chosen from the ensemble? Can some members be eliminated from further consideration once they have deviated too far from reality? Is a “return to skill” possible for eliminated members? Do the early “best” members continue to verify as best during the remainder of the period?

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Page 1: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in

Operational ForecastingDavid Bright

NOAA/Storm Prediction Center

Paul NutterCIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma

January 14, 2004January 14, 2004

Where Americas Climate and Weather Services Begin

Page 2: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

2003 SPC/NSSL Spring Program:• Objectives:

– Advance the science of weather forecasting and the prediction of severe convective weather

– Facilitate discussion and excite collaboration between researchers and forecasters through real-time forecasting and evaluation

– Bring in subject matter experts for assistance– Efficient testing and delivery of results to SPC operations

• Emphasis:– Model predicted convective initiation (< 15 hrs) [40%]– Explore SREF systems' ability to aid severe convective weather

forecasting via Day 2 Probability Outlook [60%]

Page 3: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

Model (or Best Member) of the Day• Can a “best member” be chosen from the

ensemble? • Can some members be eliminated from further

consideration once they have deviated too far from reality?

• Is a “return to skill” possible for eliminated members?

• Do the early “best” members continue to verify as best during the remainder of the period?

Page 4: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

“Return to Skill” in Lorenz '63 Model

• Trajectories return to nearly the same point, but have taken different paths through phase space (The forecast is “right” for the wrong reason)

• Difference varies by time and variable (and space as seen later)

Page 5: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

Unique Best members in Lorenz '63 Model

• In perfect model, nearly every ensemble member has been considered “best” by the time ensemble skill saturates relative to climatology.

• In a biased model, ensemble skill saturates more quickly, but the growth of unique best members is a bit slower.

Average scores for 1000 60-member ensembles

Page 6: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

• 15 members

• 5 Eta; 5 EtaKF; 5 RSM

• 1 Control; 2 +/- Bred initial perturbations

• 63 hour forecast starting at 09 UTC and 21 UTC

• 48 km grid spacing

NCEP SREF used in Spring Program

Page 7: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

Spatial Variability of “Best” Members

After ranking ensemble members, the median, maximum, and minimum also show highly mixed contributions

Page 8: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

Best Member Statistics, or Loss of Member Skill

• Following Best Member ideas of Roulston and Smith (2003)– Attempted to:

• find a “true best ensemble” member at all forecast hours, and • correlate F015 ensemble ranking to F039 ensemble ranking

– Normalized RMSE based on 22 variables• PMSL, PWTR, CAPE• 2 meter: T, Td• 10 meter: U, V• 700, 500, 300 hPa: T, r, U, V, Z

– RUC analyses served as “truth”at 0000 and 1200 UTC

– 24 days of August 2003

Page 9: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

• The ensemble mean is nearly always closest to the analyses

• Without ensemble mean, ~3 members are considered best among the 6 that could have been identified during the forecast

Page 10: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

r = .28

Loss of SkillCan 15 hr verification help predict 39 hr

results?

Page 11: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

• 12-hr rank correlation gradually increases with lead time

• Inclusion of the ensemble mean always improves the result

Excludes Mean

Includes Mean

Page 12: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

• Rank correlation decreases with increasing lead time

• A particular member should not be isolated as a preferred deterministic forecast

Page 13: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ

Summary

• Skill is not monotonic throughout the forecast.

• Performance measures vary widely by parameter and through space and time.

• The ensemble mean is usually the “best member”.

• Attempts to isolate a single best ensemble member will not yield the best forecast over time.

• Eliminating poorly-performing ensemble members early in the forecast degrades its collective future value.

Page 14: On the Challenges of Identifying the “Best” Ensemble Member in Operational Forecasting David Bright NOAA/Storm Prediction Center Paul Nutter CIMMS/Univ