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Space Weather Prediction Center
NCEP PSR 2011Doug Biesecker
Outline
• SWPC’s GPRA and Geomagnetic Storms• The first Operational SWx Model
– WSA-Enlil
• What’s coming next?– Geospace Modelling– Whole Atmosphere Modelling
SWPC’s Proposed GPRA• Geomagnetic Storm Forecast Accuracy
– Percentage of geomagnetic storms occurring for which a forecast was successfully issued
• Storms equal to or exceeding the Minor Storming level as defined by the Daily Geomagnetic A-index ≥ 30
– equivalent to ≥ G1 Level on the NOAA Space Weather Scales.– Solar Cycle 23 (5/1996 – 12/2008) GPRA accuracy was 30%– Statistics are tracked for last 30 A ≥ 30 storms
• (10/14/2003-10/31/2011)
FY11 Target
FY12 Target
FY13 Target
FY14 Target
FY15 Target
FY16 Target
GPRA POD Goals 30%
FAR=70%
40%FAR=60%
40%FAR=60%
45%FAR=55%
50%FAR=50%
50%FAR=50%
POD Actual 38%FAR=63% 3
The Geomagnetic Storm SWx Scale
Geomagnetic Storm Impacts
Manned SpaceflightIncreased radiation risk
Power Grid OperationsGrid failure, Grid capacity, Component Failure,
GPS Timing
Impacts from geomagnetic storms are wide-ranging
with potentially significant consequences.
GPSPrecision Agriculture,
Surveying, Drilling, Military
Satellite OperationsLoss of mission, reduction in capability
Aircraft OperationsPolar Flights, WAAS, NextGen,
Airline Communication 5
SWPC Customer Growth is Accelerating
WSA-Enlil Improves Geomagnetic Storm Prediction
• Accepted in FOC Dec 5, 2011?• Provides perspective on co-
rotating structures 1-27 days in advance, CME’s 1-4 days
• Reduces error in geomagnetic storm onset time from ±12 hrs to ±6 hrs
• Reason for early GPRA success?
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The Results
‘Average error’ is calculated as ‘average absolute error’, which was used by CCMC in Taktakishvili et al. 2010.
‘RMS error’ is the community preferred measure.
The ‘community’ accepted error during Solar Cycle 23 is ±12 to ±15 hours
EVENT START Shock at ACEWSA/ENLIL
NOAA DIFF
02/13/2011 01:44 02/18/2011 00:49 02/17/2011 15:00 9:49
03/08/2011 20:14 03/10/2011 06:10 03/10/2011 08:00 1:50
06/02/2011 07:57 06/04/2011 19:58 06/04/2011 08:00 11:58
06/21/2011 03:25 06/23/2011 02:26 06/23/2011 12:00 9:34
08/02/2011 06:19 08/05/2011 17:22 08/05/2011 17:00 0:22
09/06/2011 00:00 09/09/2011 11:49 09/09/2011 17:00 5:11
09/14/2011 02:00 09/17/2011 02:56 09/16/2011 21:00 5:56
09/24/2011 10:00 09/26/2011 11:53 09/26/2011 16:00 4:07
10/01/2011 00:00 10/05/2011 06:47 10/05/2011 16:00 9:13
10/26/2011 10:00 10/30/2011 08:55 10/30/2011 10:00 1:05
11/09/2011 13:54 11/12/2011 05:30 11/12/2011 02:00 3:30
11/26/2011 08:00 11/28/2011 21:15 11/29/2011 12:00 14:45
AVERAGE ERROR 6:26
RMS ERROR 7:48
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Customers
Enlil CONOPS
NSO
SWFO
WSA-Enlilmodel run
Modelresults
NGDC
NASA
MonitorCME event
NCEPCCS
Ambient & CME inputs
GONGdataSOHO
LASCOdata
SWFO Forecast products
Archiveoutputs
GenerateCME cone
data
Process model results
Generate graphicalproducts
Inform improved forecast
STEREOdata
NASA
Name CME
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T = 0 T = 5 days
CME 1
10 day model startup forecast5 days CME injection
T = -15
CME 2
1.5 hours Wallclock time on NWS CCS
WSA-Enlil run schematic
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CME’s are parameterized as a simple ‘cone’
WSA-Enlil production run cycle at NCOmodel runs every 2 hours
00Z 02Z 04Z 06Z
Enlil Enlil Enlil with CME Enlil
PreprocessedGONG data
PreprocessedGONG data
PreprocessedGONG data
PreprocessedGONG data
CME Detected
CMECone Data
WSA WSAWSAWSA
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Inputs drive the performance• ENLIL propagates CME’s from the corona out to Earth
– Driven by the empirical WSA-Model• WSA errors in wind speed of 50-100 km/s are common• WSA errors in background wind speed of order 100km/s can
change arrival time by up to 6 hours– Driven by the parameterization of Coronal Mass Ejections
observed in near-real-time• An educated guess would be the CME parameter estimates are
good to no better than 20%• 20% error in CME parameters can change arrival time by more
than 6 hours• This is where SWPC efforts will be devoted in FY12 and
likely beyond
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WSA-Enlil in action
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One of the better results1:05
0:22
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Today’s Forecast
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“The forecast is for rain, somewhere on Earth, sometime today.”
Is this an analogy to geomagnetic disturbance products today? Perhaps a slight exaggeration, nevertheless there is a need for regional forecasts with
longer lead time.
www.ruralwellbeing.org.uk/ images/weatherman.gif
Geospace Model Transition
Howard SingerNOAA Space Weather Prediction Center
Safeguarding Our Nation’s Advanced Technologies
Geospace Models
Protecting Power Grids
(and other services)
Regional Geomagnetic Activity Prediction
• Need for both continuous activity prediction and storm prediction (location, onset time, duration, magnitude, probability of exceeding threshold)
• Focus on dB/dt and Kp• dB/dt: demonstrated
customer need (e.g. power utilities)
• Regional K: to serve customers and demonstrate improvement over current global products
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Secondary GeomagneticActivity Products and Metrics
MHD Model Auroral Products
Latitude, width, local time, and intensity of the auroral electrojets
Related to locations of large dB/dt’s
Related to location of HF radio absorption
Provides location of polar cap where Solar Energetic Particle’s have access and can disrupt HF radio communication
Energetic particle precipitation
Metrics need to be developed
Potential data sources for comparison include: AMPERE, DMSP, POES, ground-based magnetometers
Polar Visible Aurora: High Solar Wind Conditions on
April 17, 1999 over the North Pole
Geosynchronous orbit magnetopause crossing Ionosphere: products and disturbances; e.g TEC
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Models at CCMC Participatingin Geospace Evaluation
MHD Models: 1. Space Weather Modeling Framework (SWMF) - U. of Michigan (delivered to CCMC)2. The Open Geospace General Circulation Model (Open GGCM) - University of New Hampshire (delivered to CCMC)3. Coupled Magnetosphere-Ionosphere-Thermosphere (CMIT) - BU CISM, Dartmouth, NCAR (delivered to CCMC)4. Grand Unified Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling Simulation (GUMICS) - Finnish Meteorological Institute (recently parallelized, not ready for full evaluation for selection process)
Empirical Models:5. Weimer Empirical Model, Va. Tech (delivered to CCMC/may update)6. Weigel Empirical Model, George Mason (delivered to CCMC)
SOLAR WIND – INDUCED ELECTRIC CURRENTS FLOWING IN THE
MAGNETOSPHERE
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Credit: Kivelson and Russell, Introduction to Space Physics
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Geospace Model Transition: Recent Activities and Current Schedule
• 4/25/11: Geospace modeler meeting focused on evaluation metrics, selection process and initiate discussion to understand resource requirements
• May-June 2011: Spatial, temporal, and window sensitivity testing at CCMC to refine and iterate on metrics, event selection, verification measures
• June 26 – July 1 2011: GEM-CEDAR Workshop including Modeling Challenges and discussions with modelers on sensitivity tests and schedule
• July – Nov 2011 : Empirical model tests, gathering data for additional events, tool to integrate currents, comparisons of db/dt calculated by CCMC and modelers (SWMF and GGCM)
• Dec: Presentations and discussions with modelers at Metrics and Validation Session at Geospace Modeling Workshop (day before AGU meeting)
• Jan 2012: Runs and post processing
• Feb – March 2012: Analysis and Report Writing
• April-May 2012: SWPC circulate draft report for comments
• June 2012 : Model Selection at SWPC (I suppose this is now a choice for Louis?)
Geospace Model Plans
• FY11 Model Selection– Metrics– Community wide testing
• Mid-FY12 Begin Transition• FY15 Begin Operations
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Computational Requirements
• Models under consideration run in real-time or near-real time on 64 processors• This configuration used for model evaluation• Detailed conops will be developed during FY12
• Current vision includes:• Porting codes to NCEP research computer and testing in configurations
used during evaluation period. • Test runs using 64 processors for several intervals of solar wind
conditions of up to 2-week duration• Input and output data have 1-minute time resolution; however, time
steps can be on the order of 5 seconds• Codes produce on the order of 100 Gbytes/day output (it will not be
necessary to store the entire output data stream, although details need to be worked.)
• Test models on different types of events: 64 processors, for 2 to 3 day runs
• Test models with different resolutions and code settings: 128 processors, for 2 to 3 day runs
Input for Geospace
• NASA/ACE Satellite at L1– Upstream of Earth 1
million miles• 15-60 minutes
– Solar wind velocity, density and magnetic field
– WSA/ENLIL can provide 2.5/3 inputs
• Hoped for NOAA replacement (DSCOVR (Triana)) in FY11 Budget
Now for a right turn…
• Space Weather meets Terrestrial Weather– Where?
• At 60km
– Why?• To better describe the
ionosphere– GPS– Communications– Satellite Drag
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Integrated Dynamics in Earth’s Atmosphere (IDEA)
Whole Atmosphere Model (WAM)• Collaborators
– NCEP Environmental Modeling Center (EMC)
– Naval Research Laboratory (NRL)
– National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
– Others
• Sponsored by– AFOSR Multidisciplinary
University Research Initiative (MURI) program
– NASA Living With a Star (LWS) and Heliophysics Theory programs
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WAM = Extended GFS
Team: R. Akmaev, F. Wu, T. J. Fuller-Rowell, H. Wang
The advantage of Whole Atmosphere Modelling
• The Whole Atmosphere Model (WAM) is an extension of the operational Global Forecast System (GFS) model currently used operationally– The operational version of this model is run four times a day but is limited to
60 km.• The WAM, currently under development for space weather, is an
extension of GFS up to 600 km with additional atmospheric chemistry and dynamics appropriate for the upper atmosphere.– The WAM has been tested and validated at low spatial resolution and has
shown great promise in capturing many space weather features and phenomena critical to GPS users, satellite drag/ orbit prediction, and satellite communication
– Vertically extended models and data assimilation systems have also been shown to benefit conventional weather prediction by removing artificial boundaries and eliminating the limitations of existing operational systems by better specification of upper layers through which the weather satellites observe the lower atmosphere.
The basic tasks• There are three critical research areas that need to be
addressed:– (1) the development and implementation of the
Ionosphere-Plasmasphere-Electrodynamics (IPE) module– (2) understanding the impact of increasing spatial
resolution of the model– (3) implementation and testing of new data assimilation
techniques applicable to the middle and upper atmospheres and ionosphere.
• These activities will help in the assessment and understanding of the impact of the lower atmosphere on the structure and irregularities of the ionosphere.
Funding in FY12(13?)• $800K to the National Weather Service, NCEP Central Operations
– for additional computation resources (CPU and disk)– allowing WAM to be run at higher spatial/temporal resolution which would resolve waves and
structures propagating from the troposphere which are critical for initiating ionospheric structures and scintillation
• $400K to NCEP/EMC– to support the development of Ionosphere Plasmasphere Electrodynamics module and the
integration of IPE into GFS/WAM. The IPE module adds additional physics related to the ionized component of the upper atmosphere. The neutral and ionized components are highly coupled and both are critical to the full representation of them ionospheric gradients and irregularities
• $800K to SWPC– to develop data assimilation techniques for satellite data above 60 km. There are several
assimilation techniques (Kalman Filter, 3-D-VAR, 4-D-VAR, etc) which have strengths and weaknesses at various altitudes in the atmosphere. These techniques need to be implemented, explored, and evaluated.
– to support evaluation of the model improvements and validation and verification of the results of each of these improvements (higher resolution, IPE module, and data assimilation) data being implemented into WAM.
• The application of these additional resources will accelerate the model development by at least two years.
Computational Requirements• WAM estimate for annual computer requirement
for 2012 on NCEP machines.– The first 6 months on vapor, the following 6 months
presumably on the new SGI machine, zeus. If there is a delay in porting WAM to zeus it could impact the expected usage.
– Total requirement, all projects: 34050 node-hours,or ~4250 hours on 8 nodes, or roughly 8 nodes 50% of the time. Margin of error 50%.
– Disk space requirements ~30 TB for 2012.• 2013-2015 usages are estimate to increase by a
factor of two per year.
Future Plans
• Space Weather has come into numerical prediction in a small way in FY12 with WSA-Enlil– Bringing a dramatic improvement in prediction of
geomagnetic storms• FY12-15 will see a large increase in SWPC
needs for computational resources– Geospace and WAM modeling will bring dramatic
new capabilities that will benefit many areas of space weather
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