The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble

Philippe Bougeault(European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts), Zoltán Tóth(Hungarian Meteorological Service), Craig H. Bishop(United States Department of the Navy), Barbara G. Brown(NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research), D. M. Burridge(United Nations), De Hui Chen(China Meteorological Administration), Beth Ebert(Collaboration for Australian Weather and Climate Research), Manuel Fuentes(European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts), Thomas M. Hamill, Ken Mylne(Met Office), Jean Nicolau(Météo-France), Tiziana Paccagnella(Agenzia Regionale Prevenzione e Ambiente della Regione Emilia-Romagna), Young-Youn Park(Korea Meteorological Administration), David B. Parsons(United Nations), Baudouin Raoult(European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts), Douglas Schuster(NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research), Pedro Leite da Silva Dias(Universidade de São Paulo), Richard Swinbank(Met Office), Yoshiaki Takeuchi(Japan Meteorological Agency), Warren Tennant(Met Office), Laurence J. Wilson, Steve Worley(NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research)
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
February 26, 2010
Cited by 478Open Access
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Abstract

Ensemble forecasting is increasingly accepted as a powerful tool to improve early warnings for high-impact weather. Recently, ensembles combining forecasts from different systems have attracted a considerable level of interest. The Observing System Research and Predictability Experiment (THORPEX) Interactive Grand Globa l Ensemble (TIGGE) project, a prominent contribution to THORPEX, has been initiated to enable advanced research and demonstration of the multimodel ensemble concept and to pave the way toward operational implementation of such a system at the international level. The objectives of TIGGE are 1) to facilitate closer cooperation between the academic and operational meteorological communities by expanding the availability of operational products for research, and 2) to facilitate exploring the concept and benefits of multimodel probabilistic weather forecasts, with a particular focus on high-impact weather prediction. Ten operational weather forecasting centers producing daily global ensemble forecasts to 1–2 weeks ahead have agreed to deliver in near–real time a selection of forecast data to the TIGGE data archives at the China Meteorological Agency, the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, and the National Center for Atmospheric Research. The volume of data accumulated daily is 245 GB (1.6 million global fields). This is offered to the scientific community as a new resource for research and education. The TIGGE data policy is to make each forecast accessible via the Internet 48 h after it was initially issued by each originating center. Quicker access can also be granted for field experiments or projects of particular interest to the World Weather Research Programme and THORPEX. A few examples of initial results based on TIGGE data are discussed in this paper, and the case is made for additional research in several directions.


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