Treffer: Statistical post-processing of the navy nested tropical cyclone model and the operational tropical cyclone model : final report for period October 1980-September 1981

Title:
Statistical post-processing of the navy nested tropical cyclone model and the operational tropical cyclone model : final report for period October 1980-September 1981
Contributors:
Operations Research (OR), Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.), Graduate School of Operational and Information Sciences (GSOIS), Meteorology
Publisher Information:
Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
Publication Year:
1981
Collection:
Naval Postgraduate School: Calhoun
Document Type:
Report report
File Description:
51 p. : ill.; 28 cm.; application/pdf
Language:
English
Relation:
Accession Number:
edsbas.188560EC
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

A statistical technique proposed by Elsberry and Frill (1980) for adjusting dynamical tropical cyclone motion forecasts is extended to the Two-Way Interactive Nested Tropical Cyclone Model (NTCM) and the operational Che-Way Interactive Tropical Cyclone Model (TCMO) . The technique utilizes linear regression equations to reduce systematic errors. Backward extrapolation positions are presented as a less expensive, but inferior, alternative to the backward integration positions required by the original technique. A scheme is developed for applying the technique in storm-motion coordinates as well as zonal-meridional coordinates. Tests with 186 NTCM cases indicate moderate improvement in forecast errors by the zonal-meridional regression technique, and slight improvement by the storm-coordinate scheme. In TCMO tests with 212 cases, the zonal-meridional regression equations reduced the forecast errors, but the storm-coordinate equations did not. The technique failed to improve forecast errors in independent tests with NTCM 1981 data, presumably due to differences in error biases, which indicates a need for a larger sample size. Alternatively backward integration positions may be necessary to achieve consistent improvements from this statistical technique. The technique was able to improve 60h-72h forecast errors in TCMC 1981 cases. ; Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. ; Prepared for: Naval Environmental Prediction Research Facility, Monterey, California 93940. ; http://archive.org/details/statisticalpostp00peak