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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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Amongst all the discussion of the MO's winter forecast, one very
important point has been missed. Unfortunately, the original forecast seems no longer to be available, but the updated version, issued on 22 Dec, says: QUOTE The forecast is based on our prediction that the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) will be negative this winter. UNQUOTE Note the use of the word "will", and the absence of any percentage probability. Unlike other parts of the forecast which are given probabilities, this statement will be able to be judged come the end of February. No judgment should, of course, be made at this stage, but these figures indicate what sort of February may be required for the statement to verify: Month.....Iceland/Azores....1961-90 norm......NAO-index Dec 2005 ...... 18.1 .................17.0 ..................+1.1 Jan 2006 ....... 28.7 ................. 17.4 .................+11.3 required Feb 2006 ........ 2.2 ................. 14.7 ................. -12.5 I have used mean sea-level pressure at grid-points 65N25W and 40N 30W to represent Iceland and the Azores, because these are easily available to me, and I have used 1961-90 as it is believed that this is probably the standard period used in developing the method, although I cannot find in the documents covering methodology (or the forecast itself) on the MO website any specification of the period. The only quoted period I have found is 1950-1998 for the hindcast study itself. In that hindcast study it is said that the NAO index used there is based on data at the 500mbar level, but it also insists that there is little difference between that index and the surface NAO index. Out of interest, the coldest Februarys of the last 130 years had the following NAO indexes[sic]: 1986 -17.7 1963 -11.2 1956 -12.7 1947 -32.7 1895 -32.2 .....so it is possible .... Philip Eden |
#2
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Thank you Philip.
So have they made a forecast of what it will be for February? Since it was possible to make a forecast for winter, early on, one would presume they can make one for Febraury - hopefully with greater accuracy. Dave "Philip Eden" philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom wrote in message ... Amongst all the discussion of the MO's winter forecast, one very important point has been missed. Unfortunately, the original forecast seems no longer to be available, but the updated version, issued on 22 Dec, says: QUOTE The forecast is based on our prediction that the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) will be negative this winter. UNQUOTE Note the use of the word "will", and the absence of any percentage probability. Unlike other parts of the forecast which are given probabilities, this statement will be able to be judged come the end of February. No judgment should, of course, be made at this stage, but these figures indicate what sort of February may be required for the statement to verify: Month.....Iceland/Azores....1961-90 norm......NAO-index Dec 2005 ...... 18.1 .................17.0 ..................+1.1 Jan 2006 ....... 28.7 ................. 17.4 .................+11.3 required Feb 2006 ........ 2.2 ................. 14.7 ................. -12.5 I have used mean sea-level pressure at grid-points 65N25W and 40N 30W to represent Iceland and the Azores, because these are easily available to me, and I have used 1961-90 as it is believed that this is probably the standard period used in developing the method, although I cannot find in the documents covering methodology (or the forecast itself) on the MO website any specification of the period. The only quoted period I have found is 1950-1998 for the hindcast study itself. In that hindcast study it is said that the NAO index used there is based on data at the 500mbar level, but it also insists that there is little difference between that index and the surface NAO index. Out of interest, the coldest Februarys of the last 130 years had the following NAO indexes[sic]: 1986 -17.7 1963 -11.2 1956 -12.7 1947 -32.7 1895 -32.2 ....so it is possible .... Philip Eden |
#3
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"Philip Eden" philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom wrote in news:43e0c344$0
: I have used mean sea-level pressure at grid-points 65N25W and 40N 30W to represent Iceland and the Azores Philip I did something similar comparing the relative strengths of the high in the area around the Azores and in Scandinavia since 1987, I'll post later in the week on this thread when I'm less busy ! Richard |
#4
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Philip, this confuses and surprises me somewhat:
Felly sgrifennodd Philip Eden philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom: Note the use of the word "will", and the absence of any percentage probability. To be fair, there was a probability if you looked up the forecasting methods, where they said that the May SST anomalies (?I think) predict with 2/3 certainty the NAO. That's from memory, and I am open to correction! Month.....Iceland/Azores....1961-90 norm......NAO-index Dec 2005 ...... 18.1 .................17.0 ..................+1.1 Jan 2006 ....... 28.7 ................. 17.4 .................+11.3 required Feb 2006 ........ 2.2 ................. 14.7 ................. -12.5 So why is it that the weather that has dominated here and in continental Europe recently is exactly what one would have expected from a negative NAO (is it not?). It certainly matches closely what I made a point of reading about when I saw the NAO forecast. Adrian -- Adrian Shaw ais@ Adran Cyfrifiadureg, Prifysgol Cymru, aber. Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, Cymru ac. http://users.aber.ac.uk/ais uk |
#5
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![]() "Adrian D. Shaw" wrote in message ... Philip, this confuses and surprises me somewhat: Felly sgrifennodd Philip Eden philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom: Note the use of the word "will", and the absence of any percentage probability. To be fair, there was a probability if you looked up the forecasting methods, where they said that the May SST anomalies (?I think) predict with 2/3 certainty the NAO. That's from memory, and I am open to correction! You may well be right, but I am quoting from their web page wich purports to discuss the reasoning behind the forecast. I think that is fair. Norman and others have pointed out that it is not possible to verify a forecast which depends on probabilities until one has a sufficiently large number of them. The statement that I quote will be verifiable on March 1. Month.....Iceland/Azores....1961-90 norm......NAO-index Dec 2005 ...... 18.1 .................17.0 ..................+1.1 Jan 2006 ....... 28.7 ................. 17.4 .................+11.3 required Feb 2006 ........ 2.2 ................. 14.7 ................. -12.5 So why is it that the weather that has dominated here and in continental Europe recently is exactly what one would have expected from a negative NAO (is it not?). It certainly matches closely what I made a point of reading about when I saw the NAO forecast. That is evident, but your expectations are flawed. This is also why the point I am making has been missed. Is a forecast which turns out to be correct for the wrong reason still correct? To be fair to other posters, it has once or twice - quite correctly - been mentioned that the correlation between winter weather over Europe and/or the UK on the one hand, and the NAO index on the other, is far from exact. No all -ve NAOi winters are cold and dry. Not all cold and dry winters have a -ve NAOi. Philip |
#6
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![]() "Adrian D. Shaw" wrote in message ... Philip, this confuses and surprises me somewhat: Felly sgrifennodd Philip Eden philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom: Note the use of the word "will", and the absence of any percentage probability. To be fair, there was a probability if you looked up the forecasting methods, where they said that the May SST anomalies (?I think) predict with 2/3 certainty the NAO. That's from memory, and I am open to correction! So why is it that the weather that has dominated here and in continental Europe recently is exactly what one would have expected from a negative NAO (is it not?). It certainly matches closely what I made a point of reading about when I saw the NAO forecast. Let me throw another thought into the discussion. A -ve winter NAOi does not automatically guarantee a -ve winter CET. (OK, I know that's not quite what was offered, but it's what people are expecting). A quick flick through the individual monthly sea-level pressure charts for the last 30 years suggests that the relationship between NAOi and CET may also be something like 2/3 (maybe a little more, but not much). So, if we accept that figure, the possible outcomes a 44% colder than average with a -ve NAOi 22% colder than average with a +ve NAOi 22% warmer than average with a -ve NAOi 11% warmer than average with a +ve NAOi So, if the forecast is right for the wrong reason, is it a success? If it is wrong, but for the right reason, is that a success? I can see the press release forming as I speak. Either of those will be a "partial success" or a "qualified success". So there is an 89% probability that the MO's winter forecast will be spun as a success or a partial success. Just try it, Wayne. Philip Eden |
#7
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Let me throw another thought into the discussion. A -ve winter NAOi
does not automatically guarantee a -ve winter CET. (OK, I know that's not quite what was offered, but it's what people are expecting). A quick flick through the individual monthly sea-level pressure charts for the last 30 years suggests that the relationship between NAOi and CET may also be something like 2/3 (maybe a little more, but not much). So, if we accept that figure, the possible outcomes a 44% colder than average with a -ve NAOi 22% colder than average with a +ve NAOi 22% warmer than average with a -ve NAOi 11% warmer than average with a +ve NAOi So, if the forecast is right for the wrong reason, is it a success? If it is wrong, but for the right reason, is that a success? I can see the press release forming as I speak. Either of those will be a "partial success" or a "qualified success". So there is an 89% probability that the MO's winter forecast will be spun as a success or a partial success. Just try it, Wayne. Philip Eden The problem I have with these % probability forecasts, is when the probability is less than 50%. If it doesn't happen, the forecast was correct, in that it predicted correctly that something didn't happen. So, in Winter instead of the forecastor saying "There is a 70% chance it will stay mild" he/she says "There is a 30% chance of cold weather returning". Graham |
#8
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Felly sgrifennodd Philip Eden philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom:
Let me throw another thought into the discussion. A -ve winter NAOi does not automatically guarantee a -ve winter CET. (OK, I know that's not quite what was offered, but it's what people are expecting). A quick flick through the individual monthly sea-level pressure charts for the last 30 years suggests that the relationship between NAOi and CET may also be something like 2/3 (maybe a little more, but not much). So, if we accept that figure, the possible outcomes a 44% colder than average with a -ve NAOi 22% colder than average with a +ve NAOi 22% warmer than average with a -ve NAOi 11% warmer than average with a +ve NAOi So, if the forecast is right for the wrong reason, is it a success? If it is wrong, but for the right reason, is that a success? Interesting, thanks for these figures! The Met Office figures still add up though, using your 2/3 relationship. They forecast a -ve NAO with 2/3 probability, therefore by inference also a +ve NAO with 1/3 probability. The forecast of a cooler than average winter for central Europe was based on: 44% chance of colder than average with -ve NAO 22% chance of colder than average with +ve NAO = 66% chance of colder than average winter. Assuming that actually is how they arrived at their 2/3 chance (maybe an assumption too far), then the forecast was right (for Central Europe, at least). But what is right, when we're talking percentages, rather than black and white/yes and no? Really, it just provides more data to plug back into the statistics for another year. But to put it another way, I doubt that many Europeans would say that the forecast was misleading. Adrian -- Adrian Shaw ais@ Adran Cyfrifiadureg, Prifysgol Cymru, aber. Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, Cymru ac. http://users.aber.ac.uk/ais uk |
#9
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"Philip Eden" philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom wrote:
So, if the forecast is right for the wrong reason, is it a success? If it is wrong, but for the right reason, is that a success? When I was forecasting, I think I would've claimed a right forecast for the wrong reason as a success - not that it ever happened, of course. There were enough occasions when the forecast was right but the weather was wrong for me not to feel guilty. -- Graham Davis Bracknell |
#10
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In message , Adrian D. Shaw
writes Felly sgrifennodd Philip Eden philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom: Let me throw another thought into the discussion. A -ve winter NAOi does not automatically guarantee a -ve winter CET. (OK, I know that's not quite what was offered, but it's what people are expecting). A quick flick through the individual monthly sea-level pressure charts for the last 30 years suggests that the relationship between NAOi and CET may also be something like 2/3 (maybe a little more, but not much). So, if we accept that figure, the possible outcomes a 44% colder than average with a -ve NAOi 22% colder than average with a +ve NAOi 22% warmer than average with a -ve NAOi 11% warmer than average with a +ve NAOi So, if the forecast is right for the wrong reason, is it a success? If it is wrong, but for the right reason, is that a success? Interesting, thanks for these figures! The Met Office figures still add up though, using your 2/3 relationship. They forecast a -ve NAO with 2/3 probability, therefore by inference also a +ve NAO with 1/3 probability. The forecast of a cooler than average winter for central Europe was based on: 44% chance of colder than average with -ve NAO 22% chance of colder than average with +ve NAO = 66% chance of colder than average winter. Assuming that actually is how they arrived at their 2/3 chance (maybe an assumption too far), then the forecast was right (for Central Europe, at least). But what is right, when we're talking percentages, rather than black and white/yes and no? Really, it just provides more data to plug back into the statistics for another year. But to put it another way, I doubt that many Europeans would say that the forecast was misleading. Adrian, when I was in the Office we used to work on a zonal index which I understood to be the mean of the surface pressure difference between the Azores and Reykavik. I would be interested to see the upper air anomalies this winter. Whether they be 500MB, Total thickness or 300MB. I was used to working at 300MB while CFO (as it was then) used 250MB both for obvious reasons. (Jet stream). Although I have no data I think I can still suggest that the semi-sinusoidal upper pattern over the eastern northern Atlantic has been fairly static in January. I suppose the NAO is based on the upper air, in January the upper ridge was maintained by a series of confluent upper troughs relaxing to the south of Iceland thereby maintaining a semi-permanent upper ridge and the surface high over northern UK. As you may gather from my cautious wording - I stand to be corrected. Cheers Paul -- 'Wisest are they that know they do not know.' Socrates. Paul Bartlett FRMetS www.rutnet.co.uk Go to local weather. 400FT AMSL 25Miles Southwest of the Wash |
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