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Sensitivity of Surface Temperature Analyses to Background and Observation Errors Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah
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Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Sensitivity of Surface Temperature Analyses to Background and Observation Errors

Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. HorelDepartment of Atmospheric Sciences, University of UtahSalt Lake City, Utah

Page 2: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Outline

Note: This talk is an excerpt from a paper that has been recently submitted to WAF for review (with M. de Pondeca as a co-author)

Introduction Research motivation Goals

Development of a Local (2D-Var) Surface Analysis Downscaled background Observations Specification of observation error variances and background error covariances

Data denial methodology Hilbert curve withholding technique Root-mean-square error and sensitivity

Case Study Shenandoah Valley, morning surface inversion Results

Summary

Page 3: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Introduction

High resolution mesoscale analyses becoming necessary in variety of fields

Research began in 2006 to help evaluate Real-Time Mesoscale Analysis (RTMA) Estimate error (co)variances of background and observations Identify overfitting problems in analyses

Developed a local surface analysis to help meet these goals Goals of this presentation:

Describe the local surface analysis Present estimates of the background error covariance and

observation error variance Present a data denial methodology to assess analysis accuracy and

identify overfitting problems

Page 4: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Local Surface Analysis (LSA)

2D-Var surface temperature analysis Background

5 km res. downscaled RUC 1-hr forecast RTMA 5-km terrain developed from NDFD

Observations Includes various mesonet and METAR observations ±12 min time window; -30/+12 min time window for RAWS

observations Background and observation errors

Specified in terms of vertical and horizontal spatial distance using decorrelation length scales

Determined using month long sample of observations

Page 5: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Background Downscaling for Temperature

1. Horizontal bilinear interpolation2. Vertical interpolation to height of RTMA terrain

using RUC low level lapse rate RTMA < RUC Elevation: RUC low level lapse rate

multiplied by distance between two elevations and added to RUC 2-m temperature

RTMA > RUC Elevation: RUC 2-m temperature used For complete downscaling description, see

Benjamin et al. 2007 Problem: unphysical features in strong surface

temperature inversions

Page 6: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Observation and Background Error Variances Statistical analysis performed on month-long sample of

observations across CONUS See paper for details; same method used by Myrick and

Horel (2006) Results of analysis show σo

2:σb2 should be doubled (2:1)

Network σb2 (°C2) σb

2 +σo2 (°C2) σo

2 (°C2) Avg. num./hr

ALL 1.4 7.5 6.1 11,464

METAR 2.0 6.2 4.2 1,744

PUBLIC 1.4 6.6 5.3 6,486

RAWS 2.6 12.6 10.0 1,301

OTHER 1.9 8.1 6.2 1,961

Page 7: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Background Error Covariance: Example Correlation - Winchester, VA

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0

R = 80 km, Z = 200 mR = 40 km, Z = 100 m

Page 8: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Data Denial Methodology

Evaluation of analyses done by randomly withholding observations

Two error measures: Root-mean-square error (RMSE) calculated at the observation

gridpoints

Root-mean-square sensitivity computed across all gridpoints

Measures need observations that are randomly distributed across the grid to be effective

210

1 1

M Nij ij

j i

a oRMSE

MN

210

1 1

M Lij ij

j i

d cS

ML

Page 9: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Hilbert Curve Withholding Methodology

Page 10: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Shenandoah Valley Case Study

4°x4° area centered over Shenandoah Valley, VA

Shenandoah Valley between Blue Ridge Mtns. And Appalachian Mtns.

Washington, D.C. located in eastern part of domain

Appal

achi

an M

ount

ains

KIAD

Shena

ndoa

h Va

lley

Blue

Ridge

Mou

ntai

ns0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000

Washington, D.C.

Page 11: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Case Study: Synoptic Situation

Analyzing analysis generated for 0900 UTC 22 October 2007

Strong surface inversion up to 1500 m in morning sounding

1200 UTC 22 October 2007KIAD

Page 12: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Case Study: Background Field

Downscaling leads southwest-northwest oriented bands

Observations provide detail along mountain slopes and in Shenandoah Valley

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

Page 13: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Case Study: ObservationsMETAR

16/59/1,744

PUBLIC

215/575/6,486

OTHER

10/75/1,961

RAWS

3/11/1,301

Page 14: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

LSA Analyses

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

R = 40 km, Z = 100 m, σo2/σb

2 = 1 R = 80 km, Z = 200 m, σo2/σb

2 = 2

Page 15: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

LSA Analysis Increments

-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5

R = 40 km, Z = 100 m, σo2/σb

2 = 1 R = 80 km, Z = 200 m, σo2/σb

2 = 2

Page 16: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Data Denial Example

Data denial methodology applied using 10 observation sets

RMSE and Sensitivity computed for each set of analysis characteristics

Right: Difference between control analysis and data withheld analysis Blue (red) means control

analysis was colder (warmer) than withheld 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5-0.5-1-1.5-2-2.5

Page 17: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Results

# Experiment RMSE Using All Observations (°C)

RMSE Using Withheld

Observations (°C)Sensitivity

(°C)

B Background 2.15 2.15 -

1 R = 40 km, Z = 100 m, σo2/σb

2 = 1 1.62 1.93 0.26

2 R = 80 km, Z = 200 m, σo2/σb

2 = 1 1.80 1.98 0.29

3 R = 20 km, Z = 50 m, σo2/σb

2 = 1 1.41 1.89 0.20

4 R = 40 km, Z = 100 m, σo2/σb

2 = 0.5 1.54 1.94 0.34

5 R = 40 km, Z = 100 m, σo2/σb

2 = 2 1.70 1.93 0.19

6 R = 80 km, Z = 200 m, σo2/σb

2 = 2 1.83 1.89 0.22

7 R = 20 km, Z = 50 m, σo2/σb

2 = 0.5 1.67 1.90 0.26

Measure of analysis quality in data rich areas

Measure of analysis quality in data voids

Page 18: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Summary

Local 2D-Var surface analysis developed for this research

Ratio of observation to background error variance and decorrelation length scales larger than previously assumed

Analysis of RMSE values using withheld observations and all observations provides a measure of analysis overfitting

For further information, see full article submitted to WAF for review

Page 19: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Extra Slides

Page 20: Daniel P. Tyndall and John D. Horel Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah.

Specification of Observation Error Variance and Background Error Covariance Statistical analysis using month

long sample to estimate error variances See Myrick and Horel 2006

Background error covariance specified in terms of spatial distance:

Estimation shows a σo2:σb

2 of 2:1 and horiz. and vert. decorrelation length scales of 80 km and 200 m

2 22

2 2exp expij ij

ij b

r z

R Z