You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 10 Next »

 Status: Ongoing analysis Material from: Linus, Rebecca


 

1. Impact

On 5 February tropical cyclone Batsirai made landfall on Madagascar. The cyclone had earlier affected Mauritius and La Reunion.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-60264389

2. Description of the event

3. Predictability

  

3.1 Data assimilation

 

3.2 HRES

The plot below shows surface winds from a SAR image from Sentinel (left) and a short (15-hour) HRES forecast. The data is valid for 4 February 15UTC.

Real (left) and simulated (right) infrared image valid for 4 February 15UTC (same as above).

Same as above but with the same zoom as the wind images.


The plots below show the ERA5 24-hour precipitation for 3 February, the HRES 24-hour precipitation at 1 day ahead (centre, reduced to 0.25deg), and the difference between HRES and ERA5 24-hour precipitation





The plots below show the GPM IMERG satellite precipitation for 3 and 5 February (left), the HRES 24-hour precipitation at 1 day ahead (centre), and the difference between HRES and GPM IMERG 24-hour precipitation (right)



3.3 ENS

The plots below show the tropical cyclone track for the operational ECMWF forecasts from 5 February 00UTC (first plot) to 26 January 00UTC (last plot). The symbols shows the position on 5 February 00UTC. HRES (red), ENS CF (blue), ENS PF (grey) and BestTrack (black).

The plots below show EFI and SOT for 1-day precipitation for 5 February, from different initial times.


The plots below show the ENS probability of exceeding 300mm total precip from 4th to 7th February (inclusive), produced by Calum on 3rd February for the flood bulletins, and the IMERG precip totals indicating the area where precip exceeded 300mm over the same period.


3.4 Monthly forecasts

The plots below show the tropical storm activity during the week 31 January - 6 February from different initial times.

The plots below show the same a above but for probability of anomaly greater than normal activity.

The plots below show MJO forecasts from 31 January (left), 24 Jan (middle) and 17 January (right).



3.5 Comparison with other centres


4. Experience from general performance/other cases


5. Good and bad aspects of the forecasts for the event


6. Additional material


  • No labels