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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season.
Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M |
#2
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Scott W wrote:
Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. |
#3
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Norman wrote:
Scott W wrote: Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. Sorry, I meant "for the same number of snow-lying days" not the "same snow depth". To illustrate the non-validity of using temps in deg C, if you carry out an identical exercise using temps in deg F instead, the relative severity of the individual winters changes markedly. Neither method is valid. The only valid way is to use deg K. -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. |
#4
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Norman wrote:
Scott W wrote: Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. --------------------------------- Hi Norman - indeed I have been helping Scott with this and have suggested Fahrenheit or adding a constant to the means to get a more proportional index and I think Scott will do that when time permits. Most interesting though and a good approach I think as it takes away some of those more subjective memories. Dave |
#5
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Dave Cornwell wrote:
Norman wrote: Scott W wrote: Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. --------------------------------- Hi Norman - indeed I have been helping Scott with this and have suggested Fahrenheit or adding a constant to the means to get a more proportional index and I think Scott will do that when time permits. Most interesting though and a good approach I think as it takes away some of those more subjective memories. Dave ----------------------------------------- In deg F, with (Snow Lying/Mean deg F) x 100 it comes out something like this:- 1 1962-63 0.2 32.3 213 2 1946-47 1.3 34.3 168 3 1981-82 3.7 38.7 74 4 1954-55 4.4 39.9 68 5 1984-85 3.6 38.4 68 6 1978-79 2.9 37.2 64 7 1952-53 3.8 38.8 64 8 1985-86 4.1 39.4 55 9 1955-56 3.8 38.8 51 10 2009-10 3.3 37.9 50 Nevertheless I agree deg K would be better. I don't think Scott's intention is to get an index that has quantitative meaning, more a general ranking which it seems to do better than anything else I've seen. |
#6
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Dave Cornwell wrote:
Dave Cornwell wrote: Norman wrote: Scott W wrote: Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. --------------------------------- Hi Norman - indeed I have been helping Scott with this and have suggested Fahrenheit or adding a constant to the means to get a more proportional index and I think Scott will do that when time permits. Most interesting though and a good approach I think as it takes away some of those more subjective memories. Dave ----------------------------------------- In deg F, with (Snow Lying/Mean deg F) x 100 it comes out something like this:- 1 1962-63 0.2 32.3 213 2 1946-47 1.3 34.3 168 3 1981-82 3.7 38.7 74 4 1954-55 4.4 39.9 68 5 1984-85 3.6 38.4 68 6 1978-79 2.9 37.2 64 7 1952-53 3.8 38.8 64 8 1985-86 4.1 39.4 55 9 1955-56 3.8 38.8 51 10 2009-10 3.3 37.9 50 Nevertheless I agree deg K would be better. I don't think Scott's intention is to get an index that has quantitative meaning, more a general ranking which it seems to do better than anything else I've seen. I agree that the approach is interesting. As you say, the absolute index values don't have any meaning. The indices enable winters to be compared but deg K is certainly the way to go. If snow depth could be incorporated into the calculation of the index that would add another relevant factor. Currently there is the so-call Eden Winter Snow Index (EWSI). The monthly (or seasonal) value is calculated as the sum of the daily 0900 snow depths (cm). It would then be a matter of deciding what were appropriate weighting factors to be applied to Scott's index and the EWSI before adding them. All good stuff. -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. |
#7
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Norman wrote:
Dave Cornwell wrote: Dave Cornwell wrote: Norman wrote: Scott W wrote: Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. --------------------------------- Hi Norman - indeed I have been helping Scott with this and have suggested Fahrenheit or adding a constant to the means to get a more proportional index and I think Scott will do that when time permits. Most interesting though and a good approach I think as it takes away some of those more subjective memories. Dave ----------------------------------------- In deg F, with (Snow Lying/Mean deg F) x 100 it comes out something like this:- 1 1962-63 0.2 32.3 213 2 1946-47 1.3 34.3 168 3 1981-82 3.7 38.7 74 4 1954-55 4.4 39.9 68 5 1984-85 3.6 38.4 68 6 1978-79 2.9 37.2 64 7 1952-53 3.8 38.8 64 8 1985-86 4.1 39.4 55 9 1955-56 3.8 38.8 51 10 2009-10 3.3 37.9 50 Nevertheless I agree deg K would be better. I don't think Scott's intention is to get an index that has quantitative meaning, more a general ranking which it seems to do better than anything else I've seen. I agree that the approach is interesting. As you say, the absolute index values don't have any meaning. The indices enable winters to be compared but deg K is certainly the way to go. If snow depth could be incorporated into the calculation of the index that would add another relevant factor. Currently there is the so-call Eden Winter Snow Index (EWSI). The monthly (or seasonal) value is calculated as the sum of the daily 0900 snow depths (cm). It would then be a matter of deciding what were appropriate weighting factors to be applied to Scott's index and the EWSI before adding them. All good stuff. --------------------------- Posted the link for EWSI on our FAQ's to Scott last night and suggested if he was bored on a dark winter's night....... Great minds and all that ;-). What I like is that it is self compensating for, say, a shortish but severe snowy spell but during a relatively mild winter. This offsets people's perception of how bad it was due to the disruption. Dave |
#8
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On Tuesday, December 17, 2013 11:21:39 AM UTC, Norman wrote:
Norman wrote: Scott W wrote: Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. Sorry, I meant "for the same number of snow-lying days" not the "same snow depth". To illustrate the non-validity of using temps in deg C, if you carry out an identical exercise using temps in deg F instead, the relative severity of the individual winters changes markedly. Neither method is valid. The only valid way is to use deg K. -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. Thanks, Norman. the degK approach makes complete sense - I'll address the necessary changes on the spreadsheet when I get a moment. As for the snow 'cm days' it is looking increasingly like I'll need a trip to Exeter to view daily data - apart from my own relatively limited stats I only have access to the monthly data in the Snow Survey. All fascinating stuff |
#9
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On Tuesday, December 17, 2013 4:01:11 PM UTC, Scott W wrote:
On Tuesday, December 17, 2013 11:21:39 AM UTC, Norman wrote: Norman wrote: Scott W wrote: Of interest to contributors in the Home Counties I have published a snow survey / winter index on my blog for my area in east London. It is inspired by the old Snow Survey of Great Britain which ceased publication after the 1991/92 season. Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth Not surprisingly the 62/63 season came out a long way ahead of the rest - mostly through the sheer sustained depth of the cold. There's also one or two surprises - strange how the memory can fool you. It is a work in progress and I would welcome any input. http://wp.me/p2VSmb-8M Using the mean temp in deg C gives a highly non-linear index as the temp approaches 0 deg C. For example, for the same snow depth the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.1 is double the index calculated with a mean temp of +0.2 deg C, which is certainly not the sort of result you are looking for. A mean temp of 0 deg C would give an index of infinity then as mean temps dropped below 0 deg C the index would be a decreasing negative value. Using a mean temp in deg K would be a much more valid approach. Sorry, I meant "for the same number of snow-lying days" not the "same snow depth". To illustrate the non-validity of using temps in deg C, if you carry out an identical exercise using temps in deg F instead, the relative severity of the individual winters changes markedly. Neither method is valid. The only valid way is to use deg K. -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. Thanks, Norman. the degK approach makes complete sense - I'll address the necessary changes on the spreadsheet when I get a moment. As for the snow 'cm days' it is looking increasingly like I'll need a trip to Exeter to view daily data - apart from my own relatively limited stats I only have access to the monthly data in the Snow Survey. All fascinating stuff -------------------------------------------------------------------- What chance of winter mean temp going below zero C in Wanstead? ----------------------------------------------------------------- Zero if you ask me. If you are worried I would use Fahrenheit rather than Kelvin. The latter scale would make the index rather insensitive. People in the past have always had to use multiplying/dividing factors to make their indices show what they are trying to show. The length of the snow lying is important but makes the working out of an index rather sklushy. Speshially over a glass of mulled wine. Len ------------------------------------------------------------------ Len |
#10
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In article ,
Scott W writes: Further to Dave Cornwell's comment a few weeks back that people mostly remember a winter through the amount of days with snow lying I decided to use the data I produced for my winter forecast and try to find out what snow cover has been like in my area going back to 1946/47 - the first year of the original snow survey. I then divided the snow lying days by the winter mean to give the index. I realise there is the work of Bonacina to consider but as this is national I wanted to look more indepth That's very interesting. Thanks for going to the trouble of producing it. If snow cover is the main interest, then why divide the number of days with lying snow by the mean temperature? Because the mean for 1962-3 was 0.2C and that for 1946-7 was 1.3C, the division massively inflates the index for 1962-3 compared to the earlier winter. (And what would you have done if the mean for 1962-3 had come out negative, as it very nearly did? ![]() Norman has made the same point, only rather better.] There was snow lying through much of the first two weeks of March in 1946-7. It looks as though that is included in the number of days of snow lying, but how is the winter mean value defined (and the winter rainfall total)? Was that the mean for the "traditional" three months of DJF? If so then it seems inconsistent. I'm surprised that 2010-11 doesn't make the top 20, given how cold and snowy December 2010 was over much of the country. -- John Hall "He crams with cans of poisoned meat The subjects of the King, And when they die by thousands G.K.Chesterton: Why, he laughs like anything." from "Song Against Grocers" |
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