Affiliation:
1. CIRES Climate Diagnostics Center, University of Colorado, and NOAA/Earth System Research Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado
Abstract
Abstract
Extending atmospheric prediction skill beyond the predictability limit of about 10 days for daily weather rests on the hope that some time-averaged aspects of anomalous circulations remain predictable at longer forecast lead times, both because of the existence of natural low-frequency modes of atmospheric variability and coupling to the ocean with larger thermal inertia. In this paper the week-2 and week-3 forecast skill of two global coupled atmosphere–ocean models recently developed at NASA and NOAA is compared with that of much simpler linear inverse models (LIMs) based on the observed time-lag correlations of atmospheric circulation anomalies in the Northern Hemisphere and outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) anomalies in the tropics. The coupled models are found to beat the LIMs only slightly, and only if an ensemble prediction methodology is employed. To assess the potential for further skill improvement, a predictability analysis based on the relative magnitudes of forecast signal and forecast noise in the LIM framework is conducted. Estimating potential skill by such a method is argued to be superior to using the ensemble-mean and ensemble-spread information in the coupled model ensemble prediction system. The LIM-based predictability analysis yields relatively conservative estimates of the potential skill, and suggests that outside the tropics the average coupled model skill may already be close to the potential skill, although there may still be room for improvement in the tropical forecast skill.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Reference36 articles.
1. The Global Ocean Data Assimilation System (GODAS) at NCEP;Behringer,2007
2. Evaluation of the global ocean data assimilation system at NCEP: The Pacific Ocean;Behringer,2004
3. Extended-range predictions with ECMWF models: Time-lagged ensemble forecasting;Brankovic;Quart. J. Roy. Meteor. Soc.,1990
4. Storm track predictability on seasonal and decadal scales;Compo;J. Climate,2004
5. The Twentieth Century Reanalysis Project;Compo;Quart. J. Roy. Meteor. Soc.,2011
Cited by
38 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献