Course Evaluation Now online You should have gotten an email with link.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Willem A. Landman & Francois Engelbrecht.  Nowcasting: A description of current weather parameters and 0 to 2 hours’ description of forecast weather.
Advertisements

Seasonal Climate Forecast (Forecast Method) (Revised: May 26, 2012) This product is published by the Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA), in cooperation.
El Niño, La Niña and the Southern Oscillation
It has been said that “weather is an initial value problem, whereas climate is a boundary-value problem.” What is meant by this statement? Is this statement.
Hazardous Weather Ahead and Outlook for Winter Dave Reynolds -MTR Dan Keeton - STO Meteorologists in Charge weather.gov/SanFrancisco or /Sacramento.
Review of Northern Winter 2010/11
Climate Recap and Outlook for Winter Eric Salathé JISAO Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.
The NCEP operational Climate Forecast System : configuration, products, and plan for the future Hua-Lu Pan Environmental Modeling Center NCEP.
The Role of Initial and Boundary Conditions for Sub-Seasonal Atmospheric Predictability Thomas Reichler Scripps Institution of Oceanography University.
El Nino and La Nina An important atmospheric variation that has an average period of three to seven years. Goes between El Nino, Neutral, and La Nina (ENSO.
Winter Outlook ( ) Winter Weather Forecast Conference OMSI / Oregon Chapter of the AMS 29 October 2011 Winter Weather Forecast Conference OMSI.
Chapter 13 – Weather Analysis and Forecasting. The National Weather Service The National Weather Service (NWS) is responsible for forecasts several times.
Chapter 7 Ocean Circulation: El Niño
Extreme Events and Climate Variability. Issues: Scientists are telling us that global warming means more extreme weather. Every year we seem to experience.
Exeter 1-3 December 2010 Monthly Forecasting with Ensembles Frédéric Vitart European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts.
SIO 210: ENSO conclusion Dec. 2, 2004 Interannual variability (end of this lecture + next) –Tropical Pacific: El Nino/Southern Oscillation –Southern Ocean.
Three cases: (1) La Nina event in 1989 (2) A strong El Nino in 1998 (3) A moderate El Nino in 1987 Three fields: (a) Surface temperatures and anomalies.
Are Exceptionally Cold Vermont Winters Returning? Dr. Jay Shafer July 1, 2015 Lyndon State College 1.
El Niño outlook Eric Boldt Warning Coordination Meteorologist
By Anthony R. Lupo Department of Soil, Environmental, and Atmospheric Science 302 E ABNR Building University of Missouri Columbia, MO
Assessing Predictability of Seasonal Precipitation for May-June-July in Kazakhstan Tony Barnston, IRI, New York, US.
Ocean Circulation: El Niño
Water Year Outlook. Long Range Weather Forecast Use a combination of long term predictors –Phase of Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) –Phase of Atlantic.
Course Evaluation Closes June 8th.
Objective Digital Analog Forecasting “Is The Future In The Past?”
3. Products of the EPS for three-month outlook 1) Outline of the EPS 2) Examples of products 3) Performance of the system.
1 Coupled Modeling for Week 3 & 4 Presented By: Suru Saha & Yuejian Zhu (NWS/NCEP)
La Niña and The U. S. Winter Outlook Mike Halpert, Deputy Director Climate Prediction Center / NCEP December, 2011.
Consolidated Seasonal Rainfall Guidance for Africa, June 2013 Initial Conditions Issued 9 July 2013 Forecast maps Forecast Background – ENSO update – Current.
El Niño Forecasting Stephen E. Zebiak International Research Institute for climate prediction The basis for predictability Early predictions New questions.
El Niňo. El Nińo: A significant increase in sea surface temperature over the eastern and central equatorial Pacific that occurs at irregular intervals,
Using the National Multi-Model Ensemble (NMME) System Johnna Infanti Advisor: Ben Kirtman.
Winter Weather Forecast How Windy Will in Be? Professor Cliff Mass University of Washington.
Ocean Circulation: El Niño El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) El Niño (Spanish for “the Child” in reference to baby Jesus) = warm surface current in.
Lecture 9: Air-Sea Interactions EarthsClimate_Web_Chapter.pdfEarthsClimate_Web_Chapter.pdf, p ; Ch. 16, p ; Ch. 17, p
Winter Outlook for the Pacific Northwest: Winter 06/07 14 November 2006 Kirby Cook. NOAA/National Weather Service Acknowledgement: Climate Prediction Center.
MICHAEL A. ALEXANDER, ILEANA BLADE, MATTHEW NEWMAN, JOHN R. LANZANTE AND NGAR-CHEUNG LAU, JAMES D. SCOTT Mike Groenke (Atmospheric Sciences Major)
The 2004 Atlantic Hurricane Season and Beyond Chris Landsea NOAA/Hurricane Research Division Miami, Florida, USA January and February 2004 Southern Region.
El Niño and La Niña El Niño is characterized by unusually warm ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific, as opposed to La Niña, which characterized.
Tropical dynamics and Tropical cyclones
Complication in Climate Change
WeatherDiscussion0512.
Developing and Testing a High-Resolution Ensemble-Based 6-10 Day Forecast System for Atmospheric Rivers and Heavy Precipitation over the Western U.S. Nick.
Current State of the Pacific and Indian Oceans
Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory, NCAR
Challenges of Seasonal Forecasting: El Niño, La Niña, and La Nada
Update on the Northwest Regional Modeling System 2013
IRI Multi-model Probability Forecasts
Air-Sea Interactions The atmosphere and ocean form a coupled system, exchanging heat, momentum and water at the interface. Emmanuel, K. A. 1986: An air-sea.
Course Evaluation Now online You should have gotten an with link.
Course Evaluation Now online You should have gotten an with link.
ENSO Impacts in Central Andes
Question 1 Given that the globe is warming, why does the DJF outlook favor below-average temperatures in the southeastern U. S.? Climate variability on.
El Niño and La Niña.
El Nino and La Nina An important atmospheric variation that has an average period of three to seven years. Goes between El Nino, Neutral, and La Nina (ENSO.
Edwin Gerber (New York University)
The El Niño/ Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Cycle Lab
El Nino and La Nina An important atmospheric variation that has an average period of three to seven years. Goes between El Nino, Neutral, and La Nina (ENSO.
Shuhua Li and Andrew W. Robertson
El Nino and La Nina.
The Climate System TOPICS ENSO Impacts Seasonal Climate Forecasts
Sub-seasonal prediction at ECMWF
Long Range Forecast Transient Intercomparison Project (LRFTIP-A)
El Niño-Southern Oscillation
Global Climate Change.
Cliff Mass Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Washington
Weather vs. Climate What’s the Difference?.
Case Studies in Decadal Climate Predictability
Understanding and forecasting seasonal-to-decadal climate variations
Winter/Spring Outlook:
Presentation transcript:

Course Evaluation Now online You should have gotten an email with link

Final Exam Comprehensive Stress since last midterm Celebration later that afternoon (optional, but fun)

Subseasonal and Seasonal Forecasts Subseasonal: 2-6 weeks Seasonal: 1.5-12 months

How long skill? Weather prediction skill is now extending into the second week Superstorm Sandy was a famous example, but there are more.

Observed 180 hr (7.5 days)

A number of global models are run out several weeks GFS goes out to 384 hour (16 days) ECMWF: Deterministic model: 10 days, 46 days (twice a week), and 7 months (once a month, coupled atmos/ocean) CFS (NOAA Climate Forecast System): out to 9 months. Coupled atmos/ocean

For week two, the best approach is to use global ensembles for prediction and to determine confidence

http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/map/images/ens/ens.html#us

The Climate Prediction Center has graphics that summarize week two

Longer than 2 weeks There is the potential to forecast mean or average characteristics of the atmosphere further in time. The key to this long-range forecasting is the memory of the ocean. Slowly changing surface characteristics can also be important (e.g., snow cover, sea ice coverage) These slowly changing surface characteristics have a substantial impact on the atmosphere

The Classic Example: El Nino an La Nina Persistent and large SST anomalies influence convection, which influences large scale wave patterns.

El Nino and La Nina An important atmospheric variation that has an average period of three to seven years. Goes between El Nino, Neutral, and La Nina (ENSO cycle, El Nino Southern Oscillation) Has large influence both in the tropics and midlatitudes. Main source of forecast skill beyond a few weeks.

An Important Measure is the Temperature in the Tropical Pacific

Niño Region SST Departures (oC) Recent Evolution The latest weekly SST departures are: Niño 4 -0.6ºC Niño 3.4 -1.1ºC Niño 3 -1.2ºC Niño 1+2 -1.3ºC

Why do we care? The circulations in the midlatitudes are substantially different in El Nino, Neutral, and La Nina years. Since the temperature of the tropical Pacific changes relatively slowly, this gives some meteorologist some insights into the weather over the next several months.

Teleconnections from the tropics

El Nino – weak Aleutian High

La Nina – strong Aleutian High

The correlation between El Nino/La Nina (ENSO) and midlatitude weather is the key tool for extended forecasting The BEST web site for information is at the Climate Prediction Center http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/index.shtml

Other features: MJO

MJO Phases

Long Term Impacts of Midlatitude Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies Example: the BLOB.

Caused by sustained high pressre

SST anomalies have a lot of persistence: in the case of he Blob contribute to warming downstream

Long Range Forecasts During the past two decades, a new generation of extended forecasting systems that have been developed that run global atmosphere/ocean models out MONTHS An example is the NOAA Climate Forecasting System (CFS)…now CFSv2 Runs the GFS and a coupled ocean model out 9 months.

The CFS GFS run at roughly 60 km grid spacing and 64 levels. Run every six hours (4 runs each time…an ensemble)

Operational Configuration for CFSv2 real time forecasts (T126L64) There will be 4 control runs per day from the 0, 6, 12 and 18 UTC cycles of the CFS real-time data assimilation system, out to 9 months. In addition to the control run of 9 months at the 0 UTC cycle, there will be 3 additional runs, out to one season. These 3 runs per cycle will be initialized as in current operations. In addition to the control run of 9 months at the 6, 12 and 18 UTC cycles, there will be 3 additional runs, out to 45 days. These 3 runs per cycle will be initialized as in current operations. There will be a total of 16 CFS runs every day, of which 4 runs will go out to 9 months, 3 runs will go out to 1 season and 9 runs will go out to 45 days. 0 UTC 6 UTC 18 UTC 12 UTC 9 month run (4) 1 season run (3) 45 day run (9)

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/people/wwang/cfsv2fcst/

CFS loses skill quickly after several weeks

Z500 MAE - week 1 *de-biased

Z500 MAE - week 4 *de-biased

Z500 MAE - week 4 *de-biased Errors saturate after 3 weeks Storm tracks Errors rapidly grow in the first week

SSTs: Holds Skill Longer

SST MAE - week 1 *de-biased

SST MAE - week 6 *de-biased

Seasonal Models Like to Push Classic El Nino Pattern, But Show Little Skill for Amplified Wave Patterns.

Why do subseasonal and seasonal forecasts go bad after a few weeks? Poor, parameterized convection is a very possible cause.

CHI200 Hovmoller: analysis vs week-1 forecasts Winter/Spring ‘87-’88 *single-member forecasts

CHI200 Hovmoller: analysis vs week-1 forecasts Wave propagation in both analyses and forecasts *single-member forecasts

CHI200 Hovmoller: analysis vs week-2 forecasts *single-member forecasts

CHI200 Hovmoller: analysis vs week-3 forecasts *single-member forecasts

CHI200 Hovmoller: analysis vs week-4 forecasts *single-member forecasts

CHI200 Hovmoller: analysis vs week-5 forecasts Coherent propagating structures are lost as lead time increases! More stationary features take over *single-member forecasts

CHI200 Hovmoller: other examples Winter/Spring ‘96-’97 Week-5 forecasts *single-member forecasts

CHI200 Hovmoller: other examples Spring/Summer ‘05 Week-4 forecasts *single-member forecasts

There are seasonal forecast predictions and ensembles NMME: North American Multimodel Ensemble (combines CFS and Canadian) IMME (International Multimodel Ensemble) Link here: http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/NMME/