Quantifying stratospheric biases and identifying their potential sources in subseasonal forecast systems
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Published:2022-08-19
Issue:3
Volume:3
Page:977-1001
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ISSN:2698-4016
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Container-title:Weather and Climate Dynamics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Weather Clim. Dynam.
Author:
Lawrence Zachary D.ORCID, Abalos MartaORCID, Ayarzagüena BlancaORCID, Barriopedro DavidORCID, Butler Amy H.ORCID, Calvo Natalia, de la Cámara AlvaroORCID, Charlton-Perez Andrew, Domeisen Daniela I. V.ORCID, Dunn-Sigouin EtienneORCID, García-Serrano Javier, Garfinkel Chaim I.ORCID, Hindley Neil P.ORCID, Jia Liwei, Jucker MartinORCID, Karpechko Alexey Y., Kim HeraORCID, Lang Andrea L., Lee Simon H.ORCID, Lin Pu, Osman MarisolORCID, Palmeiro Froila M.ORCID, Perlwitz Judith, Polichtchouk Inna, Richter Jadwiga H., Schwartz Chen, Son Seok-Woo, Statnaia Irina, Taguchi Masakazu, Tyrrell Nicholas L.ORCID, Wright Corwin J., Wu Rachel W.-Y.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The stratosphere can be a source of predictability for surface weather on timescales of several weeks to months. However, the potential predictive skill gained from stratospheric variability can be limited by biases in the representation of stratospheric processes and the coupling of the stratosphere with surface climate in forecast systems. This study provides a first systematic identification of model biases in the stratosphere across a wide range of subseasonal forecast systems. It is found that many of the forecast systems considered exhibit warm global-mean temperature biases from the lower to middle stratosphere, too strong/cold wintertime polar vortices, and too cold extratropical upper-troposphere/lower-stratosphere regions. Furthermore, tropical stratospheric anomalies associated with the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation tend to decay toward each system's climatology with lead time. In the Northern Hemisphere (NH), most systems do not capture the seasonal cycle of extreme-vortex-event probabilities, with an underestimation of sudden stratospheric warming events and an overestimation of strong vortex events in January. In the Southern Hemisphere (SH), springtime interannual variability in the polar vortex is generally underestimated, but the timing of the final breakdown of the polar vortex often happens too early in many of the prediction systems. These stratospheric biases tend to be considerably worse in systems with lower model lid heights. In both hemispheres, most systems with low-top atmospheric models also consistently underestimate the upward wave driving that affects the strength of the stratospheric polar vortex. We expect that the biases identified here will help guide model development for subseasonal-to-seasonal forecast systems and further our understanding of the role of the stratosphere in predictive skill in the troposphere.
Funder
Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung Israel Science Foundation Universidad de Buenos Aires Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad Natural Environment Research Council Royal Society National Research Foundation of Korea Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Mathematics
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