Title
Scale Filtering for Improved Nowcasting Performance in a High-Resolution X-Band Radar Network
Abstract
Precipitation patterns exist on a continuum of scales where generally larger scale features facilitate longer useful prediction times at the expense of coarser resolution. Favorable measurement range and resolution make weather radar observations an attractive choice for input to automated short-term weather prediction (nowcasting) systems. Previous research has shown that nowcasting performance can be improved by spatially filtering radar observations and considering only those precipitation scales that are most representative of pattern motion for prediction or filtering those scales from predicted fields deemed unpredictable by remaining past their lifetimes. It has been shown that an improvement in nowcasting performance can be obtained by first applying a nonlinear elliptical spatial filter to observed Weather Surveillance Radar 88 Doppler vertically integrated liquid water fields to predict motion of larger scale features believed to better represent the motion of the entire precipitation pattern for forecast lead times up to 1 h. It has also been shown in the literature that wavelet transform can be used to develop measures of predictability at each scale and adaptive wavelet filters can be designed to remove perishable scales from predicted continental-scale reflectivity fields according to prediction lead time. This paper investigates the adaptation of both of these approaches and Fourier filtering to evaluate the effects of scale filtering on nowcasting performance using a Fourier-based nowcasting method and high-resolution Engineering Research Center for Collaborative Adaptive Sensing of the Atmosphere radar reflectivity data. A maximum improvement of approximately 18% in terms of Critical Success Index was observed by applying Fourier filtering in the context of truncating Fourier coefficients within the prediction model to the observed sequence of reflectivity fields used for assimilation. In addition, applying Fourier filtering to the resulting predict ions showed a maximum reduction in mean absolute error of approximately 14%.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.1109/TGRS.2010.2103946
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions
Keywords
Field
DocType
Fourier analysis,atmospheric precipitation,atmospheric techniques,meteorological radar,remote sensing by radar,spatial filters,wavelet transforms,weather forecasting,Engineering Research Center for Collaborative Adaptive Sensing of the Atmosphere,Fourier filtering,Fourier-based nowcasting method,Weather Surveillance Radar 88 Doppler,adaptive wavelet filters,automated short-term weather prediction,critical success index,high-resolution X-band radar network,nonlinear elliptical spatial filter,nowcasting systems,precipitation patterns,precipitation scales,prediction times,radar reflectivity data,scale filtering,spatially filtering radar observations,vertically integrated liquid water fields,weather radar observations,Discrete Fourier transforms (DFTs),linear systems,meteorological radar,prediction methods,wavelet transforms
Secondary surveillance radar,Radar,Fourier analysis,Vertically integrated liquid,Weather radar,Remote sensing,Mathematics,Spatial filter,Nowcasting,Wavelet
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
49
6
0196-2892
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.46
2
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Evan Ruzanski1213.89
Chandrasekar, V.282.44