Meteorological applications | |
Sensitivity of model climate to sampling configurations and the impact on the Extreme Forecast Index | |
article | |
Ervin Zsoter1  Florian Pappenberger1  David Richardson1  | |
[1] European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts;College of Hydrology and Water Resources, Hohai University | |
关键词: extreme events; model climatology; ensemble forecasts; climate distribution; sample size; | |
DOI : 10.1002/met.1447 | |
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合) | |
来源: Wiley | |
【 摘 要 】
The Extreme Forecast Index (EFI) compares a medium range ensemble forecast (ENS) to climatology to establish the severity of an event. In this paper, the large-scale influence of the design and configuration of this climatology on the climate distribution and the EFI is examined. The design factors considered are ensemble size (how many ensemble members), sampling frequency (how often per week), lead-time dependency (from which lead time to draw the climatology), and the sampling length (number of years). The results show that most of the climate configurations with sample size above 50–100 give a relatively good representation of the climate distribution between the 10 th and 90 th percentiles. For more extreme percentiles (for 1–10% and 90–99%) some care is needed to select the best configuration, whereas the extreme tails of the distribution cannot be well represented by any of the investigated configurations (up to a 14 year, daily, 50 member climate), for which a bigger sample would be needed. Results show that the hindcast length is clearly the superior sampling factor in general, better than the sampling frequency and the ensemble size. In addition, the ensemble size has only very limited contribution to the non-extreme climate percentiles and the EFI, especially at short range.
【 授权许可】
CC BY|CC BY-NC|CC BY-NC-ND
【 预 览 】
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RO202107100002038ZK.pdf | 2889KB | download |