BAMOS Vol 31 Special Issue October 2018 Bulletin Vol 31 Special Issue 01 2018 | Page 17

BAMOS Special Issue The current revolution in Numerical Weather Prediction Peter Steinle Bureau of Meteorology Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) has underpinned much of the improvements in forecast accuracy over the past few decades. This has been achieved through advances in the sophistication of numerical models, the number and quality of observations and the way the observations are used to start the model forecasts. Operational NWP systems are generally maintained and developed by large teams of scientists, a situation that goes back for several decades. It is therefore easy to see this as a very mature field, with limited opportunities for major developments or, for an individual or small team to make a significant contribution. However, the continuing changes in technology and society mean that NWP will remain a very dynamic area offering many opportunities for new approaches to be developed involving a wide range of contributors. One of the major changes is the amount of observations available from both inside and outside the meteorological community. New satellites and radars will continue to provide increasing information to measure the atmosphere. There are also other technologies such as lidars that can provide even higher density information. The other rapidly growing area are observations from outside what may be considered “the official” meteorological community. This includes personal weather stations and the like, which clearly contain valuable information, but also have quite different characteristics to standard measurement sites, posing a challenge to existing systems. The largest growth though may well be in indirect observations such as air pressure from mobile phones, temperature from cars and a host of indirect measurements of rainfall such as changes in signal strength between mobile phone towers, and the signal received at NBN ground stations all the way to information on the speed of car windscreen wipers. Such observations are of course quite different to what NWP centres are used to and so accessing, processing and using this data poses a number of interesting problems. As supercomputers have grown larger and larger, the cost of the electrical power needed to drive them is becoming prohibitive. This is forcing vendors to look at radically different hardware designs, including the use of very large numbers of energy- efficient chips, such as those found in video game hardware. This change in hardware is expected to provide a major jump in the computational power that modelling centres can afford, raising the prospect of much more detailed forecasts being updated much more frequently—so not only using more observed data, but also converting that to forecast information much more quickly. This in turn requires a better transformation from meteorological variables to quantities that are used in decision making, i.e. impact forecasting. This change in computing architecture has many consequences for all computationally intensive applications, providing many more research challenges—requiring not only a redesign of models, but changing the underlying coding paradigm to enable greater flexibility in optimising numerical systems. Such changes can also mean that the efficiency of the underlying algorithms within the modelling system need to change— opening up a host of new problems across mathematics and the physical sciences. The problems posed by these changes in NWP systems are not only mathematical and/or computational, but the storage and communication of the data also needs to be reconsidered. The combination of the above changes introduces the feasibility of providing urban scale NWP. The value of introducing models with resolutions around 100m is becoming increasingly apparent. As cities grow, energy usage, production and distribution patterns change and need to be managed across all time scales, starting at minutes. This also includes efficiently managing the heat and air quality around areas of high population density—and not only the direct impact on the energy efficiency of buildings, but also the management of green spaces. The future needs of aviation are also much greater than present in order to meet increased safety and efficiency standards. As cities grow their interaction with the atmosphere changes, as does the population’s response and so emergency and health services will also require more accurate and timely information. In summary, in an increasingly technologically advanced society there is an increasing need for highly detailed, highly accurate weather forecasts. In turn the ability of technology to support these forecasts means that NWP will remain a rapidly developing field for some time to come. Furthermore, the NWP developments will require access to increasingly more areas of expertise. As a result, NWP remains a very active area of development, providing a broad scope of research topics from an increasing number of disciplines, allowing a wide range of research groups to make valuable contributions. 17