Sixth Conference on Atmospheric Chemistry: Air Quality in Megacities
Symposium on Planning, Nowcasting, and Forecasting in the Urban Zone

J2.12

Real-time Prediction of US Northeast Corridor Ozone: Results for 2001–2002 as a Benchmark for Future Forecasts Systems

John N. McHenry, Baron Advanced Meteorological Systems, Research Triangle Park, NC; and S. McKeen, W. F. Ryan, N. Seaman, J. Pudykiewicz, G. W. Grell, A. Stein, C. Coats, and J. Vukovich

The Northeast Corridor of the United States is perhaps one of the largest megacities in the world. It has been the focus of continued research on air quality impacts for many decades. As part of its efforts to mitigate against the impact of poor air quality, states that are part of the Northeast Corridor issue air quality forecasts to the public, and in the summertime, the principal pollutant of concern is ozone.

Recently, numerical models have become accurate and fast enough to provide real-time ozone forecast guidance to the operational ozone forecasters in the Northeast Corridor. During 2001-2002, NOAA conducted a two-phase pilot study to evaluate the ability of existing and prototype forecasting methods and models to accurately predict ground-level ozone with a lead time of 24-36hrs. Results demonstrate that the best available system consistently beats persistence and may be as good or better than human forecasters for certain episodes. Thus, this system provides an initial skill benchmark against which future operational systems may be compared.

extended abstract  Extended Abstract (76K)

wrf recording  Recorded presentation

Joint Session 2, Air Quality in Megacities (Joint with the Symp on Planning, Nowcasting and Forecasting in the Urban Zone and Sixth Conf on Atmospheric Chemistry; Room 612)
Tuesday, 13 January 2004, 8:30 AM-4:45 PM, Room 612

Previous paper  Next paper

Browse or search entire meeting

AMS Home Page