Abstract

Abstract. The current operational very short-term and short-term quantitative precipitation forecast (QPF) at the Meteorological Service of Catalonia (SMC) is made by three different methodologies: Advection of the radar reflectivity field (ADV), Identification, tracking and forecasting of convective structures (CST) and numerical weather prediction (NWP) models using observational data assimilation (radar, satellite, etc.). These precipitation forecasts have different characteristics, lead time and spatial resolutions. The objective of this study is to combine these methods in order to obtain a single and optimized QPF at each lead time. This combination (blending) of the radar forecast (ADV and CST) and precipitation forecast from NWP model is carried out by means of different methodologies according to the prediction horizon. Firstly, in order to take advantage of the rainfall location and intensity from radar observations, a phase correction technique is applied to the NWP output to derive an additional corrected forecast (MCO). To select the best precipitation estimation in the first and second hour (t+1 h and t+2 h), the information from radar advection (ADV) and the corrected outputs from the model (MCO) are mixed by using different weights, which vary dynamically, according to indexes that quantify the quality of these predictions. This procedure has the ability to integrate the skill of rainfall location and patterns that are given by the advection of radar reflectivity field with the capacity of generating new precipitation areas from the NWP models. From the third hour (t+3 h), as radar-based forecasting has generally low skills, only the quantitative precipitation forecast from model is used. This blending of different sources of prediction is verified for different types of episodes (convective, moderately convective and stratiform) to obtain a robust methodology for implementing it in an operational and dynamic way.

Highlights

  • Blending is the merging of extrapolation radar-based schemes with numerical weather prediction (NWP) model predictions

  • The cell evolution technique would describe in a proper way the growth and decay of the storm and, it would reproduce the variation of rainfall intensities better than only the advection

  • Advection technique is the selected to blending with the NWP model

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Summary

Introduction

Blending is the merging of extrapolation radar-based schemes with NWP model predictions. Other authors (Lin et al, 2005) compared the precipitation forecast skill of a radar-based nowcast scheme (Germann and Zawadzki, 2002) and that obtained from a numerical model (Coteet al., 1998). They attempt to optimize the statistical blending of model and radar products by discovering the best lead-time to change from one product to the other in an operational setting. This approach is further addressed by Ebert and Seed (2004) who note the limitations of such methods.

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