Abstract

Abstract Ensemble sensitivity analysis (ESA) is a numerical method by which the potential value of a single additional observation can be estimated using an ensemble numerical weather forecast. By performing ESA observation targeting on runs of the Texas Tech University WRF Ensemble from the spring of 2016, a dataset of predicted variance reductions (hereinafter referred to as target values) was obtained over approximately 6 weeks of convective forecasts for the central United States. It was then ascertained from these cases that the geographic variation in target values is large for any one case, with local maxima often several standard deviations higher than the mean and surrounded by sharp gradients. Radiosondes launched from the surface, then, would need to take this variation into account to properly sample a specific target by launching upstream of where the target is located rather than directly underneath. In many cases, the difference between the maximum target value in the vertical and the actual target value observed along the balloon path was multiple standard deviations. This may help to explain the lower-than-expected forecast improvements observed in previous ESA targeting experiments, especially the Mesoscale Predictability Experiment (MPEX). If target values are a good predictor of observation value, then it is possible that taking the balloon path into account in targeting systems for radiosonde deployment may substantially improve on the value added to the forecast by individual observations.

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