Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales

The spatial and temporal complexity of tropical cyclones (TCs) raises a number of scientific questions regarding their genesis, movement, intensification, and variability. In this dissertation, the principal goal is to determine the current state of predictability for each of these processes. To qua...

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Main Author: Belanger, James Ian
Other Authors: Curry, Judith A., Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Black, Robert X., Deng, Yi, Holland, Greg, Webster, Peter J.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/44877
id ftgeorgiatech:oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/44877
record_format openpolar
spelling ftgeorgiatech:oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/44877 2023-05-15T17:36:22+02:00 Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales Belanger, James Ian Curry, Judith A. Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Black, Robert X. Deng, Yi Holland, Greg Webster, Peter J. 2012-07-03 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1853/44877 unknown Georgia Institute of Technology http://hdl.handle.net/1853/44877 Tropical cyclones Hurricanes Forecasts Predictability Tornadoes Easterly waves Climatology Ensembles Probabilistic forecasts Cyclones Tropics Atmospheric circulation Cyclones Storms Text Dissertation 2012 ftgeorgiatech 2023-02-13T18:45:46Z The spatial and temporal complexity of tropical cyclones (TCs) raises a number of scientific questions regarding their genesis, movement, intensification, and variability. In this dissertation, the principal goal is to determine the current state of predictability for each of these processes. To quantify the current extent of tropical cyclone predictability, we assess probabilistic forecasts from the most advanced global numerical weather prediction system to date, the ECMWF Variable Resolution Ensemble Prediction System (VarEPS). Using a new false alarm clustering technique to maximize the utility of the VarEPS, the ensemble system is shown to provide well-calibrated probabilistic forecasts for TC genesis through a lead-time of one week, and pregenesis track forecasts with similar skill compared to the VarEPS's postgenesis track forecasts. To quantify the predictability of TCs on intraseasonal time scales, forecasts from the ECMWF Monthly Forecast System (ECMFS) are examined for the North Atlantic Ocean. From this assessment, dynamically based forecasts from the ECMFS provide forecast skill exceeding climatology out to weeks three and four for portions of the southern Gulf of Mexico, western Caribbean and the Main Development Region. Forecast skill in these regions is traced to the model's ability to capture correctly the variability in deep-layer vertical wind shear, the relative frequency of easterly waves moving through these regions, and the intraseasonal modulation of the Madden-Julian Oscillation. On interannual time scales, the predictability of TCs is examined by considering their relationship with tropical Atlantic easterly waves. First, a set of easterly wave climatologies for the CFS-R, ERA-Interim, ERA-40, and NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis are developed using a new easterly wave-tracking algorithm. From the reanalysis-derived climatologies, a moderately positive and statistically significant relationship is seen with tropical Atlantic TCs. In relation to large-scale climate modes, the Atlantic Multidecadal ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis North Atlantic Georgia Institute of Technology: SMARTech - Scholarly Materials and Research at Georgia Tech
institution Open Polar
collection Georgia Institute of Technology: SMARTech - Scholarly Materials and Research at Georgia Tech
op_collection_id ftgeorgiatech
language unknown
topic Tropical cyclones
Hurricanes
Forecasts
Predictability
Tornadoes
Easterly waves
Climatology
Ensembles
Probabilistic forecasts
Cyclones Tropics
Atmospheric circulation
Cyclones
Storms
spellingShingle Tropical cyclones
Hurricanes
Forecasts
Predictability
Tornadoes
Easterly waves
Climatology
Ensembles
Probabilistic forecasts
Cyclones Tropics
Atmospheric circulation
Cyclones
Storms
Belanger, James Ian
Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales
topic_facet Tropical cyclones
Hurricanes
Forecasts
Predictability
Tornadoes
Easterly waves
Climatology
Ensembles
Probabilistic forecasts
Cyclones Tropics
Atmospheric circulation
Cyclones
Storms
description The spatial and temporal complexity of tropical cyclones (TCs) raises a number of scientific questions regarding their genesis, movement, intensification, and variability. In this dissertation, the principal goal is to determine the current state of predictability for each of these processes. To quantify the current extent of tropical cyclone predictability, we assess probabilistic forecasts from the most advanced global numerical weather prediction system to date, the ECMWF Variable Resolution Ensemble Prediction System (VarEPS). Using a new false alarm clustering technique to maximize the utility of the VarEPS, the ensemble system is shown to provide well-calibrated probabilistic forecasts for TC genesis through a lead-time of one week, and pregenesis track forecasts with similar skill compared to the VarEPS's postgenesis track forecasts. To quantify the predictability of TCs on intraseasonal time scales, forecasts from the ECMWF Monthly Forecast System (ECMFS) are examined for the North Atlantic Ocean. From this assessment, dynamically based forecasts from the ECMFS provide forecast skill exceeding climatology out to weeks three and four for portions of the southern Gulf of Mexico, western Caribbean and the Main Development Region. Forecast skill in these regions is traced to the model's ability to capture correctly the variability in deep-layer vertical wind shear, the relative frequency of easterly waves moving through these regions, and the intraseasonal modulation of the Madden-Julian Oscillation. On interannual time scales, the predictability of TCs is examined by considering their relationship with tropical Atlantic easterly waves. First, a set of easterly wave climatologies for the CFS-R, ERA-Interim, ERA-40, and NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis are developed using a new easterly wave-tracking algorithm. From the reanalysis-derived climatologies, a moderately positive and statistically significant relationship is seen with tropical Atlantic TCs. In relation to large-scale climate modes, the Atlantic Multidecadal ...
author2 Curry, Judith A.
Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
Black, Robert X.
Deng, Yi
Holland, Greg
Webster, Peter J.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Belanger, James Ian
author_facet Belanger, James Ian
author_sort Belanger, James Ian
title Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales
title_short Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales
title_full Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales
title_fullStr Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales
title_full_unstemmed Predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales
title_sort predictability and prediction of tropical cyclones on daily to interannual time scales
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/44877
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1853/44877
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