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    Roots of Ensemble Forecasting

    Source: Monthly Weather Review:;2005:;volume( 133 ):;issue: 007::page 1865
    Author:
    Lewis, John M.
    DOI: 10.1175/MWR2949.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: The generation of a probabilistic view of dynamical weather prediction is traced back to the early 1950s, to that point in time when deterministic short-range numerical weather prediction (NWP) achieved its earliest success. Eric Eady was the first meteorologist to voice concern over strict determinism?that is, a future determined by the initial state without account for uncertainties in that state. By the end of the decade, Philip Thompson and Edward Lorenz explored the predictability limits of deterministic forecasting and set the stage for an alternate view?a stochastic?dynamic view that was enunciated by Edward Epstein. The steps in both operational short-range NWP and extended-range forecasting that justified a coupling between probability and dynamical law are followed. A discussion of the bridge from theory to practice follows, and the study ends with a genealogy of ensemble forecasting as an outgrowth of traditions in the history of science.
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      Roots of Ensemble Forecasting

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    contributor authorLewis, John M.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:26:59Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:26:59Z
    date copyright2005/07/01
    date issued2005
    identifier issn0027-0644
    identifier otherams-85496.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4228949
    description abstractThe generation of a probabilistic view of dynamical weather prediction is traced back to the early 1950s, to that point in time when deterministic short-range numerical weather prediction (NWP) achieved its earliest success. Eric Eady was the first meteorologist to voice concern over strict determinism?that is, a future determined by the initial state without account for uncertainties in that state. By the end of the decade, Philip Thompson and Edward Lorenz explored the predictability limits of deterministic forecasting and set the stage for an alternate view?a stochastic?dynamic view that was enunciated by Edward Epstein. The steps in both operational short-range NWP and extended-range forecasting that justified a coupling between probability and dynamical law are followed. A discussion of the bridge from theory to practice follows, and the study ends with a genealogy of ensemble forecasting as an outgrowth of traditions in the history of science.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleRoots of Ensemble Forecasting
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume133
    journal issue7
    journal titleMonthly Weather Review
    identifier doi10.1175/MWR2949.1
    journal fristpage1865
    journal lastpage1885
    treeMonthly Weather Review:;2005:;volume( 133 ):;issue: 007
    contenttypeFulltext
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