Graphical Output
Examples of charts
For examples of charts, click on links in the headings below. Further details regarding interpretation of the chart and graphical products are given beneath each product.
Extended Range Graphical Output
Extended range products are available on ecCharts (all these correspond to weekly means):
- Anomaly:
- Temperature of the earth's surface
- 2m temperature
- Total precipitation
- MSLP
- 500hPa height
- Winds at 10m, 100m, 850hPa, 700hPa, 500hPa, 200hPa
- Sunshine duration
- 10hPa temperature
- 10hPa wind
- Absolute:
- 500hPa height
- Probability distribution:
- Temperature of the earth's surface
- 2m temperature
- Total precipitation
- MSLP
- Anomaly probability (for various pre-defined quantiles):
- Temperature of the earth's surface
- 2m temperature
- Total precipitation
- MSLP
- Extreme Forecast Index (EFI) and Shift of Tails (SOT):
- Temperature at 2m
- Total precipitation
Extended range products are available on web open charts (all correspond to weekly means):
Weekly mean anomaly from model climate.
The weekly mean anomaly charts display the anomaly between the forecast weekly mean and the corresponding weekly mean in the ER-M-climate.
Charts available are: 2m temperature, surface temperature, total precipitation, mean sea level pressure, winds.
Click the mouse over any location on the ensemble charts to produce probability information in diagrammatic form. Diagrams available:
Click on the central small icon in the bottom right of the web frame to show the colour scale of values appropriate to each display.
Probability that weekly mean anomaly from model climate greater than zero
The weekly anomaly probability charts display the probability that the weekly mean anomalies are greater than zero. The probability is calculated from the number of ensemble members which show an anomaly within the higher half of the the ER-M-climate distribution.
Charts available are: 2m temperature, surface temperature, total precipitation, mean sea level pressure.
Two equally probable domains can be defined: below normal and above normal.
- The chart displays the probability of the forecast anomaly lying in the upper half of the ER-M-climate distribution (i.e. above normal; warmer or wetter etc than the mean of the ER-M-climate).
White on the plot means that either:
- the proportion of members above the ER-M-climate mean is between 40% and 60%,
- or that that proportion, whatever it is, is not statistically significant.
This plot structure circumvents the fact that some ER-M-Climate distributions will be skewed (i.e. the climatological probability of seeing more than the mean is far from 50%).
Note: On precipitation charts the range of colours available for "below average" anomalies (brown colours) is constrained by the local climatology in the ER-M-climate. For example if all ENS members showed a dry week, the mean (-ve) anomaly could be no larger in magnitude than the mean in the ER-M-climate. So in some locations the strongest dry signal one can ever see will only be in the first or the second of the brown shades.
Click the mouse over any location on the ensemble charts to produce probability information in diagrammatic form. Diagrams available:
Click on the central small icon in the bottom right of the web frame to show the colour scale of values appropriate to each display.
Probability of weekly mean anomaly from model climate (in terciles, quintiles, deciles)
The weekly anomaly probability charts display the probability that the weekly mean anomalies are in the lower or uppermost third (tercile), fifth (quintile) or tenth (decile) of the ER-M-climate distribution.
Charts available are: 2m temperature, surface temperature, total precipitation, mean sea level pressure.
The probability is calculated from the number of ensemble members which show an anomaly within the highest or lowest tercile, quintile or decile of the the ER-M-climate.
Terciles: Three equally probable domains can be defined: below normal, normal and above normal.
- The upper tercile chart displays the probability of the forecast anomaly lying in the upper tercile of the ER-M-climate distribution (i.e. warmer or wetter).
- The lower tercile chart displays the probability of the forecast anomaly lying in the lower tercile of the ER-M-climate distribution (i.e. cooler or drier etc).
Quintiles: Five equally probable domains can be defined:
- The upper quintile chart displays the probability of the forecast anomaly lying in the highest quintile of the ER-M-climate distribution (i.e. warmest or wettest).
- The lower quintile chart displays the probability of the forecast anomaly lying in the lowest tercile of the ER-M-climate distribution (i.e. coolest or driest).
Deciles: Five equally probable domains can be defined.
- The upper decile chart displays the probability of the forecast anomaly lying in the highest decile of the ER-M-climate distribution (i.e. very warmest or very wettest).
- The lower decile chart displays the probability of the forecast anomaly lying in the lowest decile of the ER-M-climate distribution (i.e. very coolest or very driest).
Click the mouse over any location on the ensemble charts to produce probability information in diagrammatic form. Diagrams available:
Click on the central small icon in the bottom right of the web frame to show the colour scale of values appropriate to each display.
Extreme Forecast Index (EFI) - Extended Range Forecast
These EFI charts aim to point to areas where unusually anomalous temperature or precipitation is likely to occur.
The EFI temperature chart shows the weekly mean EFI for 2 m temperatures. This is derived from the distribution of ensemble forecast 2 m temperatures compared with the temperature distribution in the ER-M-climate.
The EFI precipitation chart shows the weekly mean EFI for precipitation. This is derived from the distribution of ensemble forecast precipitation compared with the precipitation distribution in the ER-M-climate.
Click on the central small icon in the bottom right of the web frame to show the colour scale of values appropriate to each display.
Experience suggests :
- EFI values between 0.5 to 0.8 (irrespective of sign) can be generally regarded as signifying that “unusual” weather is likely,
- EFI values greater than 0.8 (irrespective of sign) usually signifies that “very unusual” or extreme weather is likely.
The SOT index provides information about how extreme an event could potentially be. Positive SOT values indicate that at least 10% of the ensemble is forecasting an "extreme event" and a high value shows how extreme:
- Dashed black isopleths show SOT values associated with the 10% of ENS results (quantile 10) showing the coldest temperatures.
- Solid black isopleths show SOT values associated with the 10% of ENS results (quantile 90) showing the warmest temperatures or most precipitation.
Multiparameter outlook - Extended range forecast
These multi-parameter charts charts display the ensemble weekly mean:
- 500hPa geopotential height.
- anomaly of 2m temperature.
- anomaly of 10m wind.
- anomaly of sunshine duration; the fraction of time there is sunshine compared with mean sunshine duration in the ER-M-climate (e.g. +0.01 means 1% more sunshine than in the ER-M-climate; -0.05 means 5% less sunshine).
Click the mouse over any location on the ensemble charts to produce probability information in diagrammatic form. Diagrams available:
Click on the central small icon in the bottom right of the web frame to show the colour scale of values appropriate to each display.
Hovmöller diagram or Time-Longitudes diagram - Extended range forecast
Hovmöller or Time-Longitudes diagrams show the time evolution of the ensemble mean anomaly of a parameter. The x-axis represents the longitude, the y-axis represents the time evolution (time increasing downwards). Past results lie above the horizontal line and forecast results lie below.
The northern mid-latitude Hovmöller diagrams show the time evolution of the ensemble mean anomaly of geopotential height at 500hPa or 1000hPa, averaged over the latitude band 35N-60N (Northern Extratropics) or 25S-50S (Southern Extratropics). The anomaly has been computed by averaging all the members of the real-time forecast and subtracting the mean of the ER-M-climate. Contours are plotted every 1.5dam. Since it is an ensemble mean, the structures shown below the horizontal line are much more detailed in the first days of the forecast (top part) than in the last days (bottom part). Shaded areas represent the ensemble spread and are displayed only when the amplitude of the anomaly exceeds 2dam. On average spread will naturally increase with forecast lead time, though occasionally, when moving to longer lead times, there can be a reduction.
The Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) Hovmöller diagrams show the ensemble mean anomalies of outgoing long wave radiation, zonal wind at 850hPa, and velocity potential at 200hPa averaged over a tropical band (15N-15S).
Tropical Storm Probabilities - Extended range forecast
These charts show the evolution of existing and potential tropical cyclone activity.
- Strike probability is the probability (in %) that a tropical cyclone will pass within a 300 km radius from a given location and within the 7-day time window. The charts are based on the number of extended range ensemble members that predict a tropical cyclone, each member having equal weight.
- Probability anomaly charts show whether the strike probabilities are higher (red shading) or lower (blue shading) than probabilities within a 20-year model climatology within the same 7-day time window. They are computed by subtracting the model climatological probabilities from the real-time forecast probabilities. Mean anomalies of probability are shown by the scale.
- Model extended range climate charts (ER-M-climate) show weekly mean strike probabilities (in %) within the same 7-day time window.
Tropical Storm Frequency - Extended range forecast
These charts show:
- Tropical storm weekly mean frequency. The frequency is derived by comparing the ensemble members probability with that of the 20-year model climatology probabilities within the same 7-day time window.
- Tropical storm weekly mean accumulated cyclone energy (ACE). This is calculated by summing the square of the estimated maximum sustained velocity of every active tropical storm at six-hour intervals. The ACE of a time period is the sum of the ACEs for each storm and takes into account the number, strength, and duration of all the tropical storms within the 7-day time window.
Large scale mean flow - Weekly mean anomalies 500hPa and 10hPa - Extended range forecast
The mean flow and anomaly charts show, at global or regional scales, the weekly:
- mean 500hPa geopotential height and the height anomaly from the corresponding weekly mean 500hPa geopotential height of the ER-M-climate.
- mean 10hPa geopotential height and the temperature anomaly from the corresponding weekly mean 10hPa temperature of the ER-M-climate.
Click the mouse over any location on the ensemble charts to produce probability information in diagrammatic form. Diagrams available:
Click on the central small icon in the bottom right of the web frame to show the colour scale of values appropriate to each display.
Extended Range Verification
The extended range products should always be used with historical skill metrics in mind, as provided by verification probabilistic scores from the re-forecasts.
The Anomaly charts (500hPa N Hem anomaly and Global and Regional anomaly) show how past extended range forecasts performed in the lead up to a particular week. The anomaly of one week of forecasts (relative to the ER-M-climate) is compared with the weekly mean anomalies (relative to the ER-M-climate) of recent extended range forecasts verifying over the same period. They give information about the consistency between the monthly forecasts from one week to another.