Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Visualizing Long-Range Severe Thunderstorm Environment Guidance from CFSv2

2015; American Meteorological Society; Volume: 97; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1175/bams-d-14-00136.1

ISSN

1520-0477

Autores

Gregory W. Carbin, Michael K. Tippett, Samuel P. Lillo, Harold E. Brooks,

Tópico(s)

Fire effects on ecosystems

Resumo

Abstract Two novel approaches to extending the range of prediction for environments conducive to severe thunderstorm events are described. One approach charts Climate Forecast System, version 2 (CFSv2), run-to-run consistency of the areal extent of severe thunderstorm environments using grid counts of the supercell composite parameter (SCP). Visualization of these environments is charted for each 45-day CFSv2 run initialized at 0000 UTC. CFSv2 ensemble-mean forecast maps of SCP coverage over the contiguous United States are also produced for those forecasts meeting certain criteria for high-impact weather. The applicability of this approach to the severe weather prediction challenge is illustrated using CFSv2 output for a series of severe weather episodes occurring in March and April 2014. Another approach, possibly extending severe weather predictability from CFSv2, utilizes a run-cumulative time-averaging technique of SCP grid counts. This process is described and subjectively verified with severe weather events from early 2014.

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