RASP BLIPMAP Prediction Parameters and Description

RASP = Regional Atmospheric Soaring Predictions
BLIPMAP = Boundary Layer Information Prediction MAP

NB:  The atmospheric Boundary Layer (BL) is the vertical region above the surface within which air has been mixed by thermal or windshear eddies, i.e. the region where glider pilots normally fly.


Most forecasts require only a few of the parameters presented below, so those new to BLIPMAPs should first read the Basic Parameters webpage for an introduction to those parameters most important when forecasting thermal soaring conditions. 


THERMAL PARAMETER FORECASTS:
Surface Temperature                 
The temperature at a height of 2m above ground level.  This can be compared to observed surface temperatures as an indication of model simulation accuracy; e.g. if observed surface temperatures are significantly below those forecast, then soaring conditions will be poorer than forecast.  This parameter is obtained directly from WRF model output and not from a BLIPMAP computation. 
Surface Sun                 
The solar radiation reaching the surface.  A fraction of this radiation goes into heating the air (see the "Surface Heating" parameter, to which this parameter can be compared).  This parameter is obtained directly from WRF model output and not from a BLIPMAP computation. 
Normalized Surface Sun                 
The "Surface Sun" parameter normalized (divided) by the amount of solar radiation which would reach the surface in a dry atmosphere (i.e. in the absence of clouds and water vapor), expressed as a percentage.  This parameter indicates the degree of cloudiness, i.e. where clouds limit the sunlight reaching the surface. 
Surface Heating                 
Heat transferred into the atmosphere due to solar heating of the ground, creating thermals.  This parameter is an important determinant of thermals strength (as is the BL depth).  This parameter is obtained directly from WRF model output and not from a BLIPMAP computation.  MoreInfo
Boundary Layer Depth                 
Depth of the layer mixed by thermals or (vertical) wind shear.  This parameter can be useful in determining which flight direction allows better thermalling conditions when average surface elevations vary greatly in differing directions.  (But the same cautions mentioned under "Height of BL Top" also apply.)  It is also an important determinant of thermals strength (as is the Surface Heating).  MoreInfo
Height of Boundary Layer Top                  
Height of the top of the mixing layer, which for thermal convection is the average top of a dry thermal.  Over flat terrain, maximum thermalling heights will be lower due to the glider descent rate and other factors.  In the presence of clouds (which release additional buoyancy aloft, creating "cloudsuck") the updraft top will be above this forecast, but the maximum thermalling height will then be limited by the cloud base (see the "Cloud prediction parameters" section below).  Further, when the mixing results from shear turbulence rather than thermal mixing this parameter is not useful for glider flying.  NB: this BL Top is not the height where the "Thermal Index" (TI) is zero, which is a criteria used by many simple determinations of the BL top - instead, the RASP BL Top uses a more sophisticated BL Top criteria based on turbulent fluxes.  MoreInfo
Height of Critical Updraft Strength (Hcrit)                 
This parameter estimates the height at which the average dry updraft strength drops below 225 fpm and is expected to give better quantitative numbers for the maximum cloudless thermalling height than the BL Top height given above, especially when mixing results from vertical wind shear rather than thermals.  (Note: the present assumptions tend to underpredict the max. thermalling height for dry consitions.) In the presence of clouds the maximum thermalling height may instead be limited by the cloud base (see the "Cloud prediction parameters" section below).  Being for "dry" thermals, this parameter omits the effect of "cloudsuck".  MoreInfo
Thermal Height Uncertainty                 
This parameter estimates the uncertainty (variability) of the BL Top height prediction which can result from meteorological variations.  Specifically, it gives the expected increase of a BL Top height based on a Thermal Index (TI) = 0 criteria should the actual surface temperature be 4 °F warmer than forecast.  Larger values indicate greater uncertainty/variability and thus better thermalling over local "hot spots" or small-scale topography not resolved by the model.  But larger values also indicate greater sensitivity to error in the predicted surface temperature, so actual conditions have a greater likelihood of differing from those predicted.  Small values often result from the presence of a stable (inversion) layer capping and limiting thermal growth.  This parameter is most easily utilized through relative values, i.e. by first determining a "typical" value for a location and subsequently noting whether predictions for a given day are for more/less uncertainty than is typical.  MoreInfo
Thermal Updraft Velocity (W*)                 
Average dry thermal updraft strength near mid-BL height.  Subtract glider descent rate to get average vario reading for cloudless thermals.  Updraft strengths will be stronger than this forecast if convective clouds are present, since cloud condensation adds buoyancy aloft (i.e. this negects "cloudsuck").  W* depends upon both the surface heating and the BL depth.  MoreInfo
Buoyancy/Shear Ratio (B/S)                 
Dry thermals may be broken up by vertical wind shear (i.e. wind changing with height) and unworkable if B/S ratio is 5 or less.  [Though hang-gliders can soar with smaller B/S values than can sailplanes.]  If convective clouds are present, the actual B/S ratio will be larger than calculated here due to the neglect of "cloudsuck".  [This parameter is truncated at 20 for plotting.]  MoreInfo
Thermal Updraft Velocity & B/S Ratio                 
A composite plot displaying the Thermal Updraft Velocity contours in colors overlaid by a stipple representing the Buoyancy/Shear Ratio.  The stipple is heavy for B/S Ratios 0-4 and light for B/S Ratios 4-7.  The intent is to mark regions where a small B/S Ratio will make thermals difficult (or impossible) to work, though that depends upon pilot skill and circling radius. 
WIND PARAMETER FORECASTS:
Surface Wind                 
The speed and direction of the wind at 10m above the ground.  Speed is depicted by different colors and direction by streamlines.  This parameter is obtained directly from WRF model output and not from a BLIPMAP computation. 
Boundary Layer Average Wind                 
The speed and direction of the vector-averaged wind in the BL.  This prediction can be misleading if there is a large change in wind direction through the BL (for a complex wind profile, any single number is not an adequate descriptor!).  MoreInfo
Wind at the Boundary Layer Top                 
The speed and direction of the wind at the top of the BL.  Speed is depicted by different colors and direction by streamlines. 
Boundary Layer Wind Shear                 
The vertical change in wind through the BL, specifically the magnitude of the vector wind difference between the top and bottom of the BL.  Note that this represents vertical wind shear and does not indicate so-called "shear lines" (which are horizontal changes of wind speed/direction).  MoreInfo
BL Max. Up/Down Motion (BL Convergence)                 
Maximum grid-area-averaged extensive upward or downward motion within the BL as created by horizontal wind convergence.  Positive convergence is associated with local small-scale convergence lines (often called "shear lines" by pilots, which are horizontal changes of wind speed/direction) - however, the actual size of such features is much smaller than can be resolved by the model so only stronger ones will be forecast and their predictions are subject to much error.  If CAPE is also large, thunderstorms can be triggered.  Negative convergence (divergence) produces subsiding vertical motion, creating low-level inversions which limit thermalling heights.  This parameter can be noisy, so users should be wary.  For a grid resolution of 12km or better convergence lines created by terrain are commonly predicted - sea-breeze predictions can also be found for strong cases, though they are best resolved by smaller-resolution grids. MoreInfo
CLOUD PARAMETER FORECASTS:
Cumulus Potential                 
This evaluates the potential for small, non-extensive "puffy cloud" formation in the BL, being the height difference between the surface-based LCL (see below) and the BL top.  Small cumulus clouds are (simply) predicted when the parameter positive, but it is quite possible that the threshold value is actually greater than zero for your location so empirical evaluation is advised.  Clouds can also occur with negative values if the air is lifted up the indicated vertical distance by flow up a small-scale ridge not resolved by the model's smoothed topography.  MoreInfo
Cumulus Cloudbase (Sfc. LCL)                 
This height estimates the cloudbase for small, non-extensive "puffy" clouds in the BL, if such exist i.e. if the Cumulus Potential parameter (above) is positive or greater than the threshold Cumulus Potential empirically determined for your site.  The surface LCL (Lifting Condensation Level) is the level to which humid air must ascend before it cools enough to reach a dew point temperature based on the surface mixing ratio and is therefore relevant only to small clouds - unlike the below BL-based CL which uses a BL-averaged humidity.  However, this parameter has a theoretical difficulty (see "MoreInfo" link below) and quite possibly that the actual cloudbase will be higher than given here - so perhaps this should be considered a minimum possible cloudbase.  MoreInfo
Cumulus Cloudbase where CuPotential>0                 
Combining the previous two parameters, this depicts the Cumulus Cloudbase only at locations where the Cumulus Potential parameter is positive.  This single plot can be used, instead of needing to look at both the Cumulus Potential and Cumulus Cloudbase plots, if the threshold Cumulus Potential empirically determined for your site approximately equals the theoretical value of zero.  For locations where the actual threshold is greater than zero, as is often the case, this depiction will over-estimate the extent of the cumulus region. 
OvercastDevelopment Potential                 
This evaluates the potential for extensive cloud formation (OvercastDevelopment) at the BL top, being the height difference between the BL CL (see below) and the BL top.  Extensive clouds and likely OD are predicted when the parameter is positive, with OD being increasingly more likely with higher positive values.  OD can also occur with negative values if the air is lifted up the indicated vertical distance by flow up a small-scale ridge not resolved by the model's smoothed topography.  [This parameter is truncated at -10,000 for plotting.]  MoreInfo
OvercastDevelopment Cloudbase (BL CL)                 
This height estimates the cloudbase for extensive BL clouds (OvercastDevelopment), if such exist, i.e. if the OvercastDevelopment Potential parameter (above) is positive.  The BL CL (Condensation Level) is based upon the humidity averaged through the BL and is therefore relevant only to extensive clouds (OvercastDevelopment) - unlike the above surface-based LCL which uses a surface humidity.  [This parameter is truncated at 22,000 for plotting.]  MoreInfo
OvercastDevelopment Cloudbase where ODpotential>0                 
Combining the previous two parameters, this depicts the OvercastDevelopment (OD) Cloudbase only at locations where the OD Potential parameter is positive.  This single plot can be used, instead of needing to look at both the OD Potential and OD Cloudbase plots, if the threshold OD Potential empirically determined for your site approximately equals the theoretical value of zero. 
BL Explicitly-predicted CloudWater                 
This parameter is primarily for DrJack's use.  It predicts the cloud base of extensive clouds based on model-predicted formation of cloud water, giving the lowest height at which the predicted cloud water density is above a criterion value within the BL.  In theory it should be useful predicting OvercastDevelopment (OD) within the BL since it predicts extensive cloudiness, i.e. when BL clouds are predicted to extend over a full model gridcell volume.  However, the criterion to be used to indicate the presence of clouds is problematical since no single value reliably differentiates between "mist" and "cloud" concentrations.  This parameter has not yet been verified again actual conditions - comparision to flight observations will be needed to evaluate its usefulness. 
BL Cloud Cover                 
This parameter provides an additional means of evaluating the formation of clouds within the BL and might be used either in conjunction with or instead of the other cloud prediction parameters.  It assumes a very simple relationship between cloud cover percentage and the maximum relative humidity within the BL.  The cloud base height is not predicted, but is expected to be below the BL Top height.  DrJack does not have a lot of faith in this prediction, since the formula used is so simple, and expects its predictions to be very approximate - but other meteorologists have used it and it is better than nothing.  Note: Since The the "BL Cloud Cover", "Cumulus Potential", and "BL Extensive CloudBase" are based upon fundamentally different model predictions -- respectively the predicted maximum moisture in the BL, the predicted surface moisture, and an explicit cloud-water prediction -- they can yield somewhat differing predictions, e.g. the "Cumulus Potential" can predict puffy cloud formation when the "BL Cloud Cover" is zero or vice versa.
Surface Dew Point Temperature                 
The dew point temperature at a height of 2m above ground level.  This can be compared to observed surface dew point temperatures as an indication of model simulation accuracy; e.g. if observed surface dew point temperatures are significantly below those forecast, then BL cloud formation will be poorer than forecast.  This parameter is obtained directly from WRF model output and not from a BLIPMAP computation. 
CAPE                 
Convective Available Potential Energy indicates the atmospheric stability affecting deep convective cloud formation above the BL.  A higher value indicates greater potential instability, larger updraft velocities within deep convective clouds, and greater potential for thunderstorm development (since a trigger is needed to release that potential).  Note that thunderstorms may develop in regions of high CAPE and then get transported downwind to regions of lower CAPE.  Also, locations where both convergence and CAPE values are high can be subject to explosive thunderstorm development.   MoreInfo
WAVE/UPPER-LEVEL FORECASTS:
Vertical Velocity at 850/700/500mb                 
Vertical velocity at a constant pressure level, plus wind speed/direction barbs.  [850/700/500mb presure levels are approximately at 5000/8000/19000 ftMSL or 1500/2500/5800 mMSL.]  Such upward motions can result from mountain wave or BL convergence.  A white dashed straight-line represents the location of the slice used for the "Vertical Velocity Slice through Vertical Velocity Maximum" parameter since these parameters are intended to be used in conjunction.  These parameters are obtained directly from WRF model output and not from a BLIPMAP computation. 
Vertical Velocity Slice through Vertical Velocity Maximum                 
A vertical slice depicting vertical velocity (colors) and potential temperature (lines), intended to help analyze occurrences of strong upward motion.  The slice is taken through the location of the maximum vertical velocity found at a height of approximately 5000 ftAGL over a domain which excludes the outer edge of the domain (the value of that maximum and its location is given in a subtitle of the plot).  The slice parallells the wind direction at that height and is depicted by a white dashed line on the "Vertical Velocity at 850/700/500mb" paramter plots (with left-right on the slice always being left-right on the plan view).  Mt. wave predictions are best made using resultions no larger than 4km, since a coarser grid generally does not resolve the waves accurately.  Mountain waves tend to occur above the surface and tilt upwind with height, whereas BL convergences are surface-based and vertically oriented, ala this example containing both mt. wave and convergence upward motion.  These parameters are obtained directly from WRF model output and not from a BLIPMAP computation. 



INFORMATION

FORECAST DESCRIPTION:

    BLIPMAPs predict thermal soaring conditions resulting from surface heating of the Boundary Layer (BL), the scientific term for the turbulent atmospheric region mixed by surface-based thermals (so thermal tops occur at the top of the BL).  The RASP BLIPMAP program uses numerical weather model predictions to provide parameters suited to the needs of soaring pilots and presents them in graphical format.  Relative differences, both in location and in time, are expected to be more reliable indicators of soaring differences than are the precise numerical values.
    A sequence of forecasts, all for the same validation time given on the regional BLIPMAP webpage link, is produced during the day as new observational data becomes available, each updated forecast having a shorter forecast periodbetween the latest observation and validation times.  [Model initialization (observation analysis) time + Forecast Period = Validation (forecast) time]  At the top of each forecast plot is the name of the parameter, the validation date and time, and the forecast period.   The regional RASP pages give forecasts for the "Current" day and also provide the previous forecast for each time (which can be for either the current day or the preceding day).  Archived forecasts from previous days (for a single time only) can be viewed using the RASP Archive Viewer.
    The parameters are averages over grid squares as forecast by the WRF (Weather Research and Forecasting) model.  Several model grids are forecast for each location, progressing from coarsest to finest resolution with the area covered decreasing for a finer resolution grid.  Because model solutions from different grids must be hammered together at their boundaries, due to inevitable mis-matching between the grids, forecasts near the grid boundary are less accurate than those nearer the center of the domain - a dashed white line indicate the frame outside of which forecasts are strongly affected by boundary condition errors.
    The parameter values are represented by color hues which increase in "warmness" as the value increases in magnitude.  A screen magnifying tool, such as the freeware Super Magnify for Windows machines or Xzoom for X11/Linux/Unix machines, helps when discrimination between adjacent contours is difficult; alternatively, many browsers are capable of increasing/decreasing the size of an image, and Firefox users can install the Image Zoom plug-in extension to add that capability. 
    Geographic outlines are depicted on each BLIPMAP in white.  The model topography is plotted as black contours, to assist in location identification but also to emphasize the smoothed nature of the model topography.  The BLIPMAP does not predict thermal lift created by small-scale terrain features which are not resolved by the model topography, which often give localized updrafts significantly stronger than those over the surrounding smoother terrain. 

Notes:

    As with all weather products, users should check the date on each map for currency.  Small anomalous diamonds, the size of an individual model gridpoint, may appear in the plots, particularly for more sensitive parameters such as convergence or cloud parameters; these result from numerical noise and should be disregarded.
    RASP BLIPMAPs are still in development and there will likely be problems, changes, and tweaks.  Opinions on factors affecting its usability are solicited.