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MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) • Full range of products available at: http:// www.nws.noaa.gov/mdl/synop/in dex.php
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MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL)

• Full range of products available at:

http://www.nws.noaa.gov/mdl/synop/index.php

Page 2: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .
Page 3: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Global Ensemble MOS• Ensemble MOS forecasts are based on the 0000 UTC

run of the GFS Global model ensemble system. These runs include the operational GFS, a control version of the GFS (run at lower resolution), and 20 additional runs.

• Older operational GFS MOS prediction equations are applied to the output from each of the ensemble runs to produce 21 separate sets of alphanumeric bulletins in the same format as the operational MEX message.

Page 4: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Gridded MOS•The NWS needs MOS on a grid for many reasons, including for use in their IFPS analysis/forecasting system.

•The problem is that MOS is only available at station locations.

•To deal with this, NWS created Gridded MOS.

•Takes MOS at individual stations and spreads it out based on proximity and height differences. Also does a topogaphic correction dependent on reasonable lapse rate.

Page 5: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .
Page 6: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .
Page 7: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Current “Operational” Gridded MOS

Page 8: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

MOS Performance

• MOS significantly improves on the skill of model output.

• National Weather Service verification statistics have shown a narrowing gap between human and MOS forecasts.

Page 9: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Cool Season Mi. Temp – 12 UTC Cycle

Cool Season'66-67 '71-72 '76-77 '81-82 '86-87 '91-92 '96-97 '01-02

2

3

4

5

6

7

24-h GUID. 24-h LCL

48-h GUID. 48-h LCL

Average Over 80 US stations

Page 10: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Prob. Of Precip.– Cool Season(0000/1200 UTC Cycles Combined)

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

1966 1969 1972 1975 1978 1981 1984 1987 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002

Year

Brier Score Improvement over Climate

Guid POPS 24 hr Local POPS 24 hr

Guid POPS 48 hr Local POPS 48 hr

Page 11: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

MOS Won the DepartmentForecast Contest in 2003For the First Time!

Page 12: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .
Page 13: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .
Page 14: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Average or Composite MOS

• There has been some evidence that an average or consensus MOS is even more skillful than individual MOS output.

• Vislocky and Fritsch (1997), using 1990-1992 data, found that an average of two or more MOS’s (CMOS) outperformed individual MOS’s and many human forecasters in a forecasting competition.

Page 15: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Some Questions• How does the current MOS performance…driven by

far superior models… compare with NWS forecasters around the country.

• How skillful is a composite MOS, particularly if one weights the members by past performance?

• How does relative human/MOS performance vary by forecast projection, region, large one-day variation, or when conditions vary greatly from climatology?

• Considering the results, what should be the role of human forecasters?

Page 16: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

This Study

• August 1 2003 – August 1 2004 (12 months).

• 29 stations, all at major NWS Weather Forecast Office (WFO) sites.

• Evaluated MOS predictions of maximum and minimum temperature, and probability of precipitation (POP).

Page 17: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

National Weather Service locations used in the study.

Page 18: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Forecasts Evaluated• NWS Forecast by real, live humans• EMOS: Eta MOS• NMOS: NGM MOS• GMOS: GFS MOS• CMOS: Average of the above three MOSs• WMOS: Weighted MOS, each member is weighted

by its performance during a previous training period (ranging from 10-30 days, depending on each station).

• CMOS-GE: A simple average of the two best MOS forecasts: GMOS and EMOS

Page 19: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

The Approach: Give the NWS the Advantage!

• 08-10Z-issued forecast from NWS matched against previous 00Z forecast from models/MOS.– NWS has 00Z model data available, and has added

advantage of watching conditions develop since 00Z.– Models of course can’t look at NWS, but NWS looks at

models.

• NWS Forecasts going out 48 (model out 60) hours, so in the analysis there are:– Two maximum temperatures (MAX-T),– Two minimum temperatures (MIN-T), and – Four 12-hr POP forecasts.

Page 20: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Temperature Comparisons

Page 21: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

MAE (F) for the seven forecast types for all stations, all time periods, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004.

Temperature

Page 22: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

MAE for each forecast type during periods of large temperature change (10F over 24-hr), 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004. Includes data for all stations.

Large one-day temp changes

Page 23: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

MAE for each forecast type during periods of large departure (20F) from daily climatological values, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004.

Page 24: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Number of days each forecast is the most accurate, all stations.

In (a), tie situations are counted only when the most accurate temperatures are exactly equivalent. In (b), tie situations are cases when the most accurate temperatures are within 2F of each other.

Looser Tie Definition

Page 25: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Number of days each forecast is the least accurate, all stations.

In (a), tie situations are counted only when the least accurate temperatures are exactly equivalent. In (b), tie situations are cases when the least accurate temperatures are within

2F of each other.

Looser Tie Definition

Page 26: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Time series of MAE of MAX-T for period one for all stations, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004. The mean temperature over all stations is shown with a dotted line. 3-day smoothing is performed on the data.

Highly correlated time series

Page 27: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Time series of bias in MAX-T for period one for all stations, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004. Mean temperature over all stations is shown with a dotted line. 3-day smoothing is performed on the data.

Cold spell

Page 28: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

MAE for all stations, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004, sorted by geographic region.

MOS Seems to have the most problems at high elevation stations.

Page 29: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Bias for all stations, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004, sorted by geographic region.

Page 30: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Precipitation Comparisons

Page 31: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Brier Scores for Precipitation for all stations for the entire study period.

Page 32: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Brier Score for all stations, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004. 3-day smoothing is performed on the data.

Page 33: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Brier Score for all stations, 1 August 2003 – 1 August 2004, sorted by geographic region.

Precipitation

Page 34: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

Reliability diagrams for period 1 (a), period 2 (b), period 3 (c) and period 4 (d).

Page 35: MOS Developed by and Run at the NWS Meteorological Development Lab (MDL) Full range of products available at: .

The End

http://www.atmos.washington.edu/~jbaars/mos_vs_nws.html