21st Conference on Weather Analysis and Forecasting/17th Conference on Numerical Weather Prediction

11B.6

Comparison of sea–level pressure errors between the U.S. East and West Coasts during the cool seasons of 2000–2005

Lynn A. McMurdie, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; and M. Curley, B. A. Colle, and C. F. Mass

It is well known that numerical weather prediction (NWP) models have short-term forecast problems along the U.S. West Coast given the relatively data sparse Pacific Ocean. For example, it has been shown that 48-h sea-level pressure (slp) forecasts for mid-latitude cyclones over the northeastern Pacific sometimes exceed 20 mb, with position errors greater than 500 km. However, NWP models also have difficulty in predicting mid-latitude cyclones along the U.S. East Coast (nor'easters) even for relatively short lead times (24- to 48-h). To date, there have been no multi-year studies on the magnitude of these slp errors in NWP models for this region or a comparison of these errors with those typical found on the West Coast. In this study, 24-h and 48-h sea-level pressure forecasts from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) Eta model and a 12-km grid-spacing version of the PSU-NCAR MM5 are verified at six buoys along the East Coast and western Atlantic during the cool seasons (Nov 1-Mar 31) of 2000-2004. These results are then compared to NCEP Eta 24-h and 48-h slp forecasts verified at several West Coast buoys during the same period.

For the East Coast relatively large slp errors (greater than 8 mb) for the 48-h forecasts in the Eta and MM5 models occur on average between 4-6 times each winter offshore. The MM5 and Eta errors are comparable, although the Eta has significantly larger errors in the 2000-2001 cool season because of a well-documented problem in SST initializations along the coast that led to poor nor'easter predictions. Large-scale composites illustrate that the largest East Coast slp errors (> 2 standard deviation) are clearly tied to rapid cyclogenesis along the East coast. As a result, the interannual variability of the number of large errors each winter is dependent on the dominant large-scale flow pattern. For example, the slp errors are largest for the 2002-2003 season in association with several nor-easters. Interestingly, the published results from the West Coast illustrate that the 2002-2003 season had the smallest slp errors due to less cyclone activity on the West Coast. As a result, the East Coast slp errors and standard deviations for the 48-h period are more comparable to the West Coast on average for the 2002-2003 cool season, but for other years the West Coast slp errors are larger than the East Coast slp errors on average.

extended abstract  Extended Abstract (2.0M)

wrf recording  Recorded presentation

Session 11B, Model Verification
Thursday, 4 August 2005, 8:00 AM-10:15 AM, Empire Ballroom

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