Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
As we have seen in previous chapters, there is a variety of generally unavoidable sources of model error, including
initial conditions,
lateral-boundary conditions for LAMs,
land/water-surface conditions,
numerical approximations used in the dynamical core, and
parameterizations of physical processes.
Each of these input data sets or modeling approaches introduces some error in the modeling process, and ensemble prediction involves performing parallel forecasts or simulations using different arbitrary choices for the above imperfect data or methods. The objective of defining the different conditions for each model integration is to sample the uncertainty space associated with the modeling process in order to define how this uncertainty projects onto the uncertainty in the forecasts. As a preliminary example of the sensitivity of model forecasts to the above factors, Fig. 7.1 illustrates an ensemble of 5-day track predictions for hurricane Katrina in 2005. The forecasts are based on the ECMWF ensemble prediction system. The tracks are strongly dependent on the specific errors in the input observations as well as the model configurations employed.
An ensemble of forecasts is more useful than an individual, deterministic forecast for the following reasons.
The mean of the ensemble of forecasts is generally more accurate than the forecast from an individual ensemble member, when the statistics are computed over a number of forecasts.
The difference (spread, variance) among the ensemble members can be an indication of the flow-dependent quantitative uncertainty in the ensemble-mean forecast, given a proper calibration.
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