P1.1
Using a reforecast data set to improve weather predictions

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Monday, 30 January 2006
Using a reforecast data set to improve weather predictions
A302 (Georgia World Congress Center)
Thomas M. Hamill, NOAA/CIRES/CDC, Boulder, CO; and J. S. Whitaker

A “reforecast” (retrospective forecast) data set has been developed. This data set is comprised of a 15-member ensemble run out to two weeks lead. Forecasts have been run every day from 0000 UTC initial conditions from 1979 to present. The model is a 1998 version of the National Centers for Environmental Prediction's Global Forecast System (NCEP GFS) at T62 resolution. The 15 initial conditions consist of a reanalysis and seven pairs of bred modes.

This data set facilitates a number of applications that were heretofore impossible. Model errors can be diagnosed from the past forecasts and corrected, thereby dramatically increasing forecast skill. For example, calibrated precipitation forecasts over the United States based on the 1998 reforecast model are more skillful than precipitation forecasts from the 2002, higher-resolution version of the NCEP GFS. Other applications are also demonstrated, such as the diagnosis of bias for model development and an identification of the most predictable patterns of week 2 forecasts.

It is argued that the benefits of reforecasts are so large that they should become an integral part of the numerical weather prediction process. Methods for integrating reforecast approaches without seriously compromising the pace of model development are discussed.

Users wishing to explore their own applications of reforecasts can download them through a web interface.