2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

36

Transcript of 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Page 1: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.
Page 2: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.
Page 3: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE

OF CYCLONE PHASE

DIAGRAMS

Page 4: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

TO IMPROVE CYCLONE

STRUCTURAL DIAGNOSIS &

FORECASTING

Page 5: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Robert Hart1

[email protected] Evans2

[email protected] State University

2Penn State University

Page 6: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.
Page 7: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.
Page 8: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Introductionhttp://moe.met.fsu.edu/cyclonephase

Provides historical, current (real-time), and forecast diagnostics of cyclone structure using cyclone phase diagrams

These diagrams have been used experimentally and operationally since 2001 to diagnose and forecast complex cyclone evolution: (sub)tropical cyclone genesis, extratropical transition, tropical transition, and the development of hybrid structure.

Every cyclone is quantified by three physically fundamental measures of thermal & dynamic structure: B: Storm-motion-relative 900-600hPa thickness asymmetry

-VTL: 900-600hPa thermal wind [+/- = warm/cold core]

-VTU: 600-300hPa thermal wind [+/- = warm/cold core]

The various events shown here are examples over the past three years that illustrate their use and insight, while also highlighting the extensive work that remains ahead.

Page 9: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Ensemble approaches to Structural Diagnosis/Forecasting

• Consensus ensemble phase diagrams provided– Unweighted mean of models having init time within 6hr leading up to analysis time

– Shading about consensus mean provides one-standard deviation variability

– This one standard deviation range may give measure of model analysis/forecast consensus or variability

– May also reflect the number of models or the varying model integration length

– Two types of ensembles provided• Deterministic model comparison

– GFS, CMC, Air Force MM5, NGP, UKMET, GFDL

• NCEP GFS Perturbed Ensemble Comparison (11 members)

Page 10: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Case: Hurricane Michelle (2001)• Case of extratropical transition

(ET) of a tropical cyclone

• Lowest-latitude ET commencement in the period 1979-2003 (22°N), perhaps longer.

• Entire evolution from warm to cold-core (18Z/4th-12Z/6th) took place over SST >= 27°C.

• Illustrates that you can’t solely rely on climatological aspects or even real-time SST to diagnose potential cyclone structure.

• Illustrates relationship between track, interaction, and phase forecast NHC Best Track from Beven (2002)

Page 11: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Case: Hurricane Olga (2001)• Classic example of tropical

development from a cold-core cyclone

• 2.5-day lead on subtropical transition, 4-5 day lead on tropical transition, while the cyclone was just forming with cold-core structure.

• The nature of cyclone development in the models is often subtle, or ambiguous when viewed through conventional analyses. The CPS examines the full 3-D thermal & dynamic structure of the cyclone to arrive at an objective diagnosis.

NHC Best Track from Avila (2001)

Page 12: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Case: Tropical Storm Ana (2004)• Cyclone phase diagrams

successfully forecast April (sub)tropical genesis 4-5 days before it formed.

• Successful forecast of an extremely anomalous structural event

• CPS diagrams provided the first heads up on the potential historic cyclone development to operational centers.

NHC Best Track from Beven (2003)

Page 13: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Case: Brazil Enigma (2004)

• Operational global model analyses could not agree on the structure of the Brazil cyclone– GFS: Symmetric, shallow warm-core

– CMC: Asymmetric, cold-core

– NGP: Symmetric,cold-core

• AMSU-derived cyclone phase diagrams shed light on the true structure of this enigma:

Moderately deep, symmetric warm core cyclone

27 March 2004 Imagery: NASA/MODIS

Page 14: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Mixed guidance cases • Models generally produce cyclone structural

evolution types that are to first order similar

• Not infrequently, they disagree. Disagreement occurs all months of year, but most frequent in late spring, late autumn

• Indicates cyclone development is unusually sensitive to:– Analysis structural type or intensity– Model physics– Timing of environmental feature interaction– Everything

• The example to the right & below is from May 2001, when three models could not agree on the nature of cyclone development, even though the track and intensity of the surface cyclone was quite similar among the three

3-8 May 2001

Page 15: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Cyclone Phase Web Page Overview

Page 16: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Sample multi-model ensemble consensus and variability output from 2003

Hurricane Fabian’s structural forecast envelope based upon seven models

Page 17: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Hurricane Michelle (2001): AVN Phase Verification (black) Vs AVN Forecasts (color)

Page 18: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

1800 UTC 22 November 1800 UTC 24 November 1800 UTC 25 November

1800 UTC 26 November 1800 UTC 27 November 1800 UTC 28 November

Page 19: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

1800 UTC 14 April 1800 UTC 16 April 1800 UTC 17 April

1800 UTC 18 April 1800 UTC 19 April 1800 UTC 22 April

Page 20: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Full-Diagram Zoomed

The first full-lifecycle cyclone phase trajectory using AMSU

Page 21: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

3 May 2001 Phase Forecasts

Page 22: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Why is the phase of a cyclone important?• Predictability is a function of cyclone structure

• Model interpretation/trust is a function of structure

• It is often not at first apparent what the model is forecasting, or the nature of cyclone development– Provides insight into the nature of NWP cyclone development that may

otherwise be subtle or even ambiguous

• The envelope of expected intensity (as well as MPI) is a function of cyclone structure

Page 23: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Sample NCEP GFS ensemble consensus and variability output from

2003

Only 7 of 11 perturbed members shown, along

with the consensus phase evolution.

Page 24: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.
Page 25: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

00Z 22 November AVN Forecast Phase Evolution

Page 26: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

00Z 17 April AVN Forecast Phase Evolution

3-4 day lead on the development of the cyclone and its transition to shallow, then moderately deep warm-

core

Page 27: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

AMSU-derived Cyclone Structural Verification of Model Analysis

Page 28: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

May 2001:120hr Sfc/500hPa Forecast Comparison

Shaded: 1000-500hPa thickness (dm), Black Contour: 500hPa Height (dm),

White Contour: MSLP (hPa)

Page 29: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Caveats

• Guidance provided by the diagrams are only as good as the source models/analyses

• Often there is phase dependency on the type of data assimilation or model physics

Two highly varying analysesand forecasts for the same cyclone

Page 30: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Sample NCEP GFS ensemble consensus and variability output from 2003

Page 31: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Various post-tropical lifecycles: What determines the trajectory chosen?

Explosive cold-core development Warm-seclusion Cold-core decay

Schizophrenia “ET-interruptus” Merger

Page 32: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Hurricane Olga (2001):00Z 22 November AVN Forecast Fields

Page 33: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Subtropical Storm Ana (2003): UKMET Phase Verification

Page 34: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

AMSU-derived Cyclone Structural Verification of Model Analysis

Page 35: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

Summary and Ongoing Research• The cyclone phase diagrams provide for a robust multi-dimensional interpretation of cyclone structural evolution, whether historical, analysis, or forecast. Their utility has been proven

repeatedly over the past three years for extratropical transition, subtropical development, tropical transition, and more recently for diagnosing the structure of enigmatic cyclones (e.g. Brazil 2004).

• Current research seeks to utilize further the AMSU-based fields for the development of an observational cyclone phase space to accompany the model analysis/forecast CPS now available. This will enable model verification of cyclone structure and MOS-type post-processing of raw structural forecasts, leading to improved statistical guidance for structural evolution.

• Additional plans include utilizing ensemble approaches to arrive at quantitative measures of cyclone structural predictability. A third set of CPS ensembles (CMC) may soon be available.

• Finally, additional future work will utilize the cyclone phase space to augment the Atlantic tropical cyclone reanalysis project (Landsea et al. 2003), allowing for more complete definition of historical tropical cyclones.

Page 36: 2001-2004 REAL-TIME USE OF CYCLONE PHASE DIAGRAMS.

• NHC/TPC, CHC for continued critical feedback on the CPS

• Mark DeMaria (CIRA), John Knaff (CIRA) for the AMSU-derived fields

• Sim Aberson (HRD/AOML) for suggestions on ensemble approaches to cyclone structure.

• NCDC Historical GOES Browser for archived satellite imagery: http://cdo.ncdc.noaa.gov/GOESBrowser/goesbrowser

Acknowledgments & References

Avila, L., 2001: Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Olga: 24 Nov. – 4 Dec. 2001. http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2001olga.html

Beven, J., 2002: Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Michelle: 29 Oct. – 5 Nov., 2001. http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2001michelle.html

Beven, J., 2003: Tropical Cyclone Report: Tropical Storm Ana: 20-24 April 2003. http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2003ana.shtml

Evans, J.L. and R. Hart, 2003: Objective indicators of the extratropical transition lifecycle of Atlantic tropical cyclones. Mon. Wea. Rev.,131, 909-925.

Hart, R.,2003: A cyclone phase space derived from thermal wind and thermal asymmetry. Mon. Wea. Rev., 131, 585-616.

Landsea, C.W., C. Anderson, N. Charles, G. Clark, J. Dunion, J. Partagas, P. Hungerford, C. Neumann, and M. Zimmer, 2003: “The Atlantic hurricane database re-analysis project: Documentation for the 1851-1910 alterations and additions to the HURDAT database.” Hurricanes and Typhoons: Past, Present, and Future. R.J. Murnane and K.-B. Liu Editors, Columbia University Press. See also http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/project2003/hurdat.html