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New Weather Computer

Posted by emmett on Wed Jan 19, 2000 08:41 AM
from the meteorologists-and-geeks-collide dept.
Sarah writes "It seems that the National Weather Service has a brand-new computer which will allow them to predict the weather earlier and more accurately. If I were a kid, I could now plan my snow days in advance..." Yeah, but the teachers would give you enough homework to last you through the day.
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  • I could have used that Cray :( by spiralx (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:48AM
  • Great. by kwsNI (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:49AM
  • Yeah, but... by SLOfuse (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:49AM
  • More power != less warnings by Zule_Boy (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:50AM
  • Hmmmmm.... by karb (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:50AM
  • Heard this on CBS news yesterdayThe comput by gavinhall (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:51AM
  • What drives theoretical limit? by acfoo (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:52AM
  • Maybe they'll get it right now... by XenoWolf (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:53AM
  • Weather computer's predictions by erpbridge (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:54AM
  • Re:Great. by tribbel (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:54AM
  • I'm glad they got the computing resources by crosseyedatnite (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:55AM
  • New Weather Computer. by dkh2 (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @03:57AM
  • Distributed Weather Prediction by rak3 (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:00AM
  • by m2 (5408) <ib9a2f46001@sneakemail.com> on Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:01AM (#1359392) Journal
    One word: butterflies.
  • Re:Yeah, but... by QZS4 (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:02AM
  • Re:Great. by Munky_v2 (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:03AM
  • Re:What drives theoretical limit? by schporto (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:11AM
  • 786 Processors? by Cycon (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:13AM
  • I can't resist! by kmcardle (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:17AM
  • by Paul Neubauer (86753) on Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:19AM (#1359399)
    It could, it if genuinely is "suprise proof" lead to fewer warnings. I rather doubt that even this machine is really "surprise proof" with something as annoyingly comlpex as weather prediction. The real test, and likely downfall, will be to predict truly nasty weather - genuinely severe storms that spawn tornadoes, for example. While these may be somewhat predictable, I rather doubt we'll see forecasts of which paths to get clear of before the twister shreds it. That would be "surprise proof" prediction. Who really cares if the forecast high or low is off by a couple degrees?

    The real hope is that there will be sufficiently increased accuracy so that needless warnings are not issued. Hopefully the reverse will not happen and overconfidence cause a failure to issue a warning that deserves to be issued.

    As for runs on stores due to snow, maybe that situation happens in places where snow is an unusual event. I happen to be in a place where it is possible, in the colder months, to walk across lakes without getting wet. It is snowing right now and nothing much is unusual. Folks still go to work and all, and there's no rush to stores as this is just like a rain shower here, except when it's over the result can (or has to) be pushed aside.
  • FYI: Been Forcasted for Some Time Now by Postmaster General (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:20AM
  • by lythander (21981) on Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:24AM (#1359401)
    The computer is a great step forward for NOAA. I used to work for them, my wife still does -- both trained meteorologists.

    The whole "Sloppy physics" argument gives short shrift to the endeavor. The physics are very complex, and still not completely understood. They are also incredibly complex -- meteorology encompasses advanced physics and chemistry, along with the ungodly math that goes along with it. Only Theoretical physics will have more computers dedicated to it on the top 100 list of supercomputers.

    Still, forecasting is as much art as science -- Truly good forecasters rely on intuition and experience to interpret output from several different models (both graphic and numeric) and put together a forecast. Statistical methods are also used to compare with similar events from the past. It is very easy to forecast -- it is extremely time consuming and difficult to forecast WELL.

    Many TV stations' on-air people are not meteorlogists (in training or temperment)-- in fact many of the people on the weather channel are communications majors (at least they have a room full of metos telling them what's going on.)

    The theoretical limits on forecast ability come from a number of factors. The reliability and the density of data points. There are relatively few datapoints for upper-air data (release a balloon, etc...)- on the order of a few per state - and those soundings happen only twice per day (except perhaps in extremely active severe weather environments). Even automated senesing stations are few and far between. Data then has to be interpolated for intermediate points and then stuffed into the model. Most models are then run on a 64-km grid and interpolated down. Finer mesh models (32 km ETA, et. al.) are being developed, but when all the models get run on the same machine, sacrifices in the name of efficiency must be made. Additionally, we still just don't know how it all works exactly. The effects of small scale things like the "heat-island" effect of large paved areas, pollution, solar activity, etc. are still being teased out.

    Anyway, it's good to see them get the new machine (actually it wasn't so much the fire as the SPRINKLER SYSTEM that killed the old one). Give them a break. Their mission isn't to tell you what sort of coat to plan on for the morning, it's to save lives and property, and on that count, they do a hell of a job.
  • Re:I could have used that Cray :( by Doctor Memory (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:24AM
  • Its Not The Size or Speed/Its Also The Granularity by quakeaddict (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:34AM
  • Models aren't that hot by spiralx (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:38AM
  • Linux - nope by gelfling (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:39AM
  • Re:What drives theoretical limit? by paRcat (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:40AM
  • What about the models? by Pyramid (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:42AM
  • Obligatory open source comment by dsplat (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:45AM
  • Re:Obligatory open source comment by lythander (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:48AM
  • Re:Heard this on CBS news yesterdayThe comput by paRcat (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:50AM
  • Butterfly effect and the 2-week limit by bolsh (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:53AM
  • Re:Linux - nope by spell (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:57AM
  • Re:What drives theoretical limit? by m2 (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:00AM
  • Computer Science Technique Crossover by crosseyedatnite (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:03AM
  • Computer Science Technique Crossover by crosseyedatnite (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:03AM
  • Sprinkler system killed old supercomputer by Bill the Cat (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:08AM
  • Re:Its Not The Size or Speed/Its Also The Granular by CharlieG (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:08AM
  • Re:Its Not The Size or Speed/Its Also The Granular by quakeaddict (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:10AM
  • Re:What drives theoretical limit? by Bryan Andersen (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:23AM
  • by devphil (51341) on Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:24AM (#1359423) Homepage
    There are TVs scattered through the hallways where I work, switching back and forth between CNN and an internal USAF news network. On the CNN report I just watched that covers this story, there's a brief snapshot of one of the NWS scientists hacking away at a workstation running CDE.

    That's why there's a two-week limit to the forecasting times. After that, CDE has exhausted the swap space.
  • Re:Sprinkler system killed old supercomputer by lythander (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:26AM
  • Aren't there limits on predictability of wx by ch-chuck (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @05:57AM
  • That was redundant by ch-chuck (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @06:00AM
  • Re:Computer Science Technique Crossover by lythander (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @06:48AM
  • The upper air stuff is usually more important... by rlk (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @07:18AM
  • To see what meteorologists really think... by rlk (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @07:30AM
  • Re:Computer Science Technique Crossover by mesocyclone (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @07:57AM
  • Re:Great. by emechler (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @08:14AM
  • Re:Computer Science Technique Crossover by Troy Baer (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @08:46AM
  • Re:"Does God play dice?" author by Randym (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @09:27AM
  • Re:To see what meteorologists really think... by Windigo The Feral (N (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @10:40AM
  • by Windigo The Feral (N (6107) on Wednesday January 19 2000, @11:05AM (#1359437)

    Acfoo dun said:

    The article mentions a 14-day theoretical limit for forecasts. What drives this limit? I know that small-scale weather forcasting is way too complex, and they are talking about county-level forecasts.

    Short Answer: because weather is chaotic.

    Long Answer That Probably Tells You More Than You Wanted To Know :) :

    Weather systems were, oddly enough, the first systems proven to have sensitive dependence on initial conditions (the defining characteristic of a nonlinear system). A person by the name of Lorenz discovered this in early attempts to model weather systems in the late 50's/early 60's, and more and more complicated weather simulation systems have proven it even more. (As a minor aside: Both the strange attractor associated with Lorenz's discovery and the effect of it in RL are known as the "Butterfly Effect"; the attractor looks much like a butterfly, and sensitive dependence on initial conditions may be summed up roughly as "A butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil may cause enough perturbation in the atmosphere to cause a tornado in Texas a few days down the line". That's also why the one fella in this thread keeps mentioning butterflies, btw. :)

    As it turns out, a large number of the variables in weather forecasting are nonlinear. Not only that, in many areas you have multiple weather influences that can brew up storms in a jiffy and make them dissipate almost as quickly (the Ohio Valley--which lies on an eastern extension of Tornado Alley--is infamous for this: cold air rushes towards us from Canada, warm air from the Gulf which is nice and moist, the jet stream frequently puts enough twist in the air, and we usually catch stuff from the "big" Tornado Alley out west...all this together means storms can brew up with amazing speed and fury out here ["popcorn" tornadic thunderstorms aren't unknown here--we had some pop up January 3-4th, which proceeded to spawn an F3 tornado which hoovered a fair portion of the city of Owensboro, and the 1995 tornado that hit the Mt. Washington area [south of Louisville] brewed up about that quick--not the tornado, the supercell that spawned it...); also, fun statistic: Kentucky is not in the top ten for tornados per state, but IS in the top ten for killer tornados per state and killer tornados per square mile--in other words, we don't get them as often as Oklahoma, but when we get them they tend to be F2-F3 and up)...to the point we joke that Ohio Valley weather is more chaotic than chaos itself :)

    To be honest, I'd say fourteen days is DAMNED optimistic. I have never seen a forecast in my area that was more than three or four days old that was anything close to being accurate (of course, I live in the Ohio Valley, which has weather systems that make chaosologists cream, meterologists scream, and put the fear of God into storm chasers to the point they state they think the Ohio Valley is entirely too dangerous to chase tornados in :)...usually in Knoxville, TN I've found the forecasts more accurate because they don't have to deal with as much crap variable-wise). Even in relatively calm areas five or six days is REALLY stretching it...I honestly don't think meterology is going to be able to improve much on that. You might get more detail (a better idea of where snow will fall and maybe how much), but you aren't going to get any closer to longterm forecasts, and in the spring in the Ohio Valley you'll be lucky sometimes to get one or two days in during storm season. (Hell, I'll be impressed if they can actually determine accurate amounts of snowfall. I have NEVER, EVER in my 26 years seen an accurate snowfall amount forecast; hell, 50% of the time they can't even tell if it's going to be snow, freezing rain, or sleet...and this is with folks in the NWSFO who have been there longer than I've been alive, and with the most experienced TV meterologist having done weather here for some thirty years (to the point he helps out the NWSFO at times) and who also teaches the advanced meterology classes at U of L...and all of them completely and utterly unable to tell how much snow one will get. All of them missed the 1994 super-snowstorm (24 inches in one snowstorm in Louisville, which is a record--the city, for which four or five inches starts to be a "big snow", was literally paralysed for a month and the only way one could get anywhere was by 4WD...the city and county governments were literally commissioning folks with high-clearance 4WD vehicles to transport folks to the hospitals and suchlike)... like I said, I'll be IMPRESSED if they can get to the level of predicting how much snow will fall, much less long-term forecasting. :)

    And as for experience with weather modeling...most of mine is in using them for my own attempts at forecasting (I'm just a wee bit of a weather nut, to the point I'm seriously considering taking Skywarn classes and maybe even meterology courses in future, though I'm NOT up to chasing tornados just yet :). If you've been in an area for some time you learn which models work best (there are actually several different models, such as the NGM, the AVN, the ETA, etc.) for the way the weather actually behaves in your area...the most important computer in any forecast is the big meaty two-pound one between yer ears :)

  • Re:What about the models? by Windigo The Feral (N (Score:2) Wednesday January 19 2000, @11:16AM
  • yeah, but... by JackiePatti (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @12:15PM
  • Re:Its Not The Size or Speed/Its Also The Granular by coats (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @01:13PM
  • Re:What about the models? by coats (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @01:24PM
  • Re:In defense of meteorology by Zurk (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:11PM
  • Wonder who's behind THIS one! by fleckster (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @04:58PM
  • Re:What drives theoretical limit? by Skim123 (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @06:53PM
  • Use Distributed.net to predict the weather by Skim123 (Score:1) Wednesday January 19 2000, @06:55PM
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