We are excited to share that the Utah Snow Ensemble is now available on https://weather.utah.edu and has replaced the old NAEFS product.
The Utah Snow Ensemble is an 82-member ensemble for predicting snow over the contiguous western United States based on the ECMWF ensemble (ENS) and the US National Centers for Environmental Prediction Global Ensemble Forecast System (GEFS), with 51 members coming from the ENS and 31 from the GEFS. The forecasts are provided in 6-h intervals out to 240 hours (10 days). A summary of the data and methods and graphics is provided below.
Precipitation Downscaling
Precipitation from all ENS and GEFS members is downloaded on a 0.25°x0.25° grid and downscaled to 800-m grid spacing to provide higher resolution guidance. The downscaling assumes seasonally varying climatological precipitation-altitude relationships. See Lewis et al. (2017) for more information. Such a technique produces improved forecasts, but it does not account for periods during which the strength of orographic precipitation enhancement departs strongly from climatology.
Snow-to-Liquid Ratio (SLR)
Snow-to-liquid ratio (SLR) is based on a new multiple linear regression algorithm developed using SLR observations from 14 western US snow study sites (thank you to everyone who provided that data!) and temperature and wind profiles from the ERA5 reanalysis. Although we have developed more sophisticated machine learning algorithms, they were too slow for processing more than 3000 ensemble members and forecast hours, with the small accuracy loss and large speed gain of multiple linear regression a reasonable compromise.
Snow Level
The multiple linear regression derived SLR is used where the high-resolution terrain used for downscaling is at or above the 0.5°C wet-bulb temperature level. Below that level, we assume the SLR decreases linearly to 0 (i.e., becomes rain) over a distance of 200 m toward the ground, as illustrated schematically below. Everything below that level is assumed to be rain.
This approach is based on snow-level estimation techniques used by the National Weather Service Western Region (click here to access the Technical Report). It is straightforward and fast. The technique will struggle, however, when there are warm noses aloft (an issue at times in the Columbia Basin and Cascade Mountains, especially the Columbia Gorge and mountain passes), if the decrease in temperature with height is small or zero (e.g., isothermal), or if there are dense hydrometeors like graupel that can penetrate farther down through the transition zone. We make no effort to identify such periods or the possible presence of freezing rain or sleet/ice pellets instead of snow when warm noses are present aloft. Improving this method over the west will probably require some sort of machine learning method since the the coarse vertical resolution of temperature data provided for the ENS and GEFS limits our ability to take a direct thermodynamic approach. This is a subject for future work.
Four-Panel Plots
We provide loops of four-panel plots of the following variables for several regions:
- Total precipitation (water equivalent) since the beginning of the forecast period
- Total snow since the beginning of the forecast period
- 24-h precipitation (water equivalent)
- 24-h snow
- 6-h precipitation (water equivalent)
- 6-h snow
- Wet-bulb 0.5°C height above ground level
- SLR
The choice of the downscaled ECMWF ENS control for upper-left is somewhat arbitrary, but I often find it helpful to be able to look at what one member is doing. The ensemble min and max plots at the bottom are based on the lowest and highest values at each downscaled gridpoint, respectively. Thus, it is very likely that many ensemble members contribute minima or maxima in these plots so do not use them to illustrate a plausible forecast outcome across a large region. For instance, if you have one ensemble member that produces heavy snow over far northern Utah but none over central Utah and another that does the opposite, the ensemble max forecast is going to show heavy snow everywhere, even though neither member is calling for such a widespread event. Additionally, the maximum at any grid point is sometimes a pretty big outlier compared to other forecasts at that point. Please don't use the ensemble max forecast at lower right for click bait suggesting some sort of apocalyptic storm.
The bottom four panels are violin plots, which are designed to provide detailed information about the distribution of forecasts produced by the 82 ensemble members. The violin itself (filled with blue) summarizes the distribution of all 82 forecasts. The width is standardized, so the 82 forecasts are all similar when the violin is short. More forecasts fall into areas where the violin is wide. In contrast, the 82 forecasts produce a wider range of possibilities when the violin is tall and there are few forecasts in areas where there is just a line.
Note that we provide SLR distributions whether or not precipitation is forecast by the model. Thus, an SLR of 0 doesn't mean it's raining, but it means if there is precipitation, we are diagnosing that it would be rain.
The Utah Snow Ensemble is based on data and products of the European Center for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF), National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP), University of Utah, and other groups. These groups do not accept any liability whatsoever for any error or omission in the data and their availability, or for any loss or damage arising from their use.
Thanks for all you do with forecast products, much appreciated by many of us.
ReplyDeleteWell done! Excited to try these out this winter.
ReplyDeleteSuper excited for these changes. Downscale products are so helpful for me when making my own little personalized forecasts. Thanks to all who have helped make this happen.
ReplyDeleteThis is really well done, great to see the progression from the Alta text forecasts. But can you also make this for mountains in the East? It wouldn't take much work, you just generate a map of zeros every day.
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