estarzinger
Well-Known Member
This is a quote from the metoffice website saying exactly what I was trying to say . . . This suggests exactly the (confidence/consistency/certainty) analysis I was suggesting was important for cruisers to understand and do when looking at/for weather windows and routing:
"One to two days ahead the uncertainty is usually in the local details of the weather, but several days ahead the whole weather pattern can often be uncertain.
The spread of different forecasts, for a given time, gives the forecaster an indication of the uncertainty of the forecast. Confidence can also be estimated by the consistency between the latest model forecast, earlier forecasts and ensemble forecasts. If the model is consistent then confidence may be high but if it suddenly changes then confidence falls rapidly. In these situations the solutions of other models may be crucial.
Research is ongoing at the Met Office on the use of ensemble forecasts to estimate the inevitable uncertainty associated with weather forecasting and in how to best communicate that uncertainty to forecast users."
"One to two days ahead the uncertainty is usually in the local details of the weather, but several days ahead the whole weather pattern can often be uncertain.
The spread of different forecasts, for a given time, gives the forecaster an indication of the uncertainty of the forecast. Confidence can also be estimated by the consistency between the latest model forecast, earlier forecasts and ensemble forecasts. If the model is consistent then confidence may be high but if it suddenly changes then confidence falls rapidly. In these situations the solutions of other models may be crucial.
Research is ongoing at the Met Office on the use of ensemble forecasts to estimate the inevitable uncertainty associated with weather forecasting and in how to best communicate that uncertainty to forecast users."
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