An Objective Method of Forecasting Five-day Precipitation for the Tennessee Valley


Book Description

The investigation to be described in full in this report was started as a pilot project in July 1946, in an effort to improve and render more objective the precipitation anomaly estimates based on prognostic circulation patterns. Precipitation rather than temperature was investigated, because the forecast verification scores had been consistently lower on precipitation than on temperature forecasts.




Application of Synoptic Climatology and Short-range Numerical Prediction to Five-day Forecasting


Book Description

Five-day mean and daily meteorological data observed since 1949 are analyzed empirically in order to derive useful climatological and forecasting relationships between surface weather elements and the circulation pattern. The synoptic climatology of 5-day precipitation, surface temperature, 700-1000-mb. thickness, and sea level pressure is investigated by constructing fields of simple linear correlation between these elements and the simultaneous anomaly of 700-mb. height over North American and adjacent oceans. The relation of precipitation and temperature to the field of sea level pressure is studied in a similar fashion. On the basis of the analogy are drawn concerning the association between each weather element and other meteorological factors. Schematic models are then constructed showing preferred portions of the circulation pattern at 700-mb. and sea level for opposite extremes of weather in different parts of the United States.




Possibility of Long Range Precipitation Forecasting for the Hawaiian Islands


Book Description

In order to establish a meteorological forecasting system, it is necessary to find a direct relationship between measurable physical states of the atmosphere and the end product, the weather element to be forecast. The long range forecaster is quite limited in his choice of physical parameters. In fact only the very large-scale dynamics of the atmosphere which can be expressed in terms of mean pressure patterns are amenable to long range analysis. Thus the problem reduces to finding a link between mean planetary pressure patterns and precipitation in the Hawaiian Islands




Evaporation from Pans and Lakes


Book Description

And conclusions. pp. 19.







Monthly Weather Review


Book Description




Research Paper


Book Description




Three-dimensional Wind Flow and Resulting Precipitation in a Northern California Storm


Book Description

By careful consideration of the observed winds and with the aid of various empirical and dynamics relationships, a steady-state 3-dimensional wind flow is deduced over northern California for a 24-hour stormy period. The production (or evaporation) of precipitation elements is estimated for all parts of the flow, the surviving elements are followed down to the surface, and the resulting precipitation with the observed.




Further Studies in Hawaiian Precipitation


Book Description

The second problem, that of the relationships between each index and mean charts, is discussed in Part 3.