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Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP, 23 Nov- 4 Dec 2015

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Page 1: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II

Hai LinMeteorological Research Division, Environment Canada

Advanced School and Workshop on S2S

ICTP, 23 Nov- 4 Dec 2015

Page 2: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Outlines• What are modes of variability?

• Why are they important to S2S predictions?

• Methods for identifying modes of variability

e.g., Pacific North American (PNA) pattern,

North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)

• Tropical modes of variability: ENSO, IOD, MJO, QBO, etc

• Extratropical response to tropical heating

• MJO-NAO interactions

How do teleconnections provide sources of predictability?

Page 3: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Atmospheric response to tropical heating

- Tropics:

The Gill model (Gill 1980) has proven quite successful at capturing the essential features of the tropical atmospheric response to diabatic heating

- Extratropics:

1) Horizontal energy propagation of planetary waves

2) Feedback from transient eddies

3) Kinetic energy transfer from the climatological mean state

Page 4: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Middle latitude planetary Rossby waves

, ,,

,

Page 5: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Middle latitude planetary Rossby waves

Page 6: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

500 hPa height anomaly response to an equatorial diabatic heating at datelinein a linear model with observed DJF basic flow

Page 7: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Feedback from transient eddies

Page 8: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Feedback from transient eddies

Page 9: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Sheng et al. Jclim, 1998

+-

-

-

-

+

+

+

+

+- -

+PNA

−PNA

Low frequency anomaly,e.g., PNA:

Shifts jet stream and storm tracks or transienteddy activity

Transient eddies feedback to PNA and reinforce the PNA

Positive feedback

Page 10: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Interaction with mean flow

___

Page 11: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Central North Pacific and central North Atlantic ∂U/ ∂x < 0

500mb geopotential height

DJF JJA

Page 12: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Atmospheric response to tropical heating

In order for a climate model to have the right response to tropical heating (teleconnection)

1) a realistic structure of the diabatic heating

2) a right mean flow (small model bias) – for Rossby wave propagation and wave-mean flow interaction

3) a realistic simulation of transient eddies

Page 13: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Connection between the MJO and NAO

Page 14: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Data

NAO index: pentad average

MJO RMMs: pentad average

Period: 1979-2003

Extended winter, November to April (36 pentads each winter)

Page 15: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Composites of tropical

Precipitation rate for 8 MJO phases, according to Wheeler and Hendon index.

Xie and Arkin pentad data, 1979-2003

Page 16: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Lagged probability of the NAO indexPositive: upper tercile; Negative: low tercile

Phase 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Lag −5 −35% −40% +49% +49%

Lag −4 +52% +46%

Lag −3 −40% +46%

Lag −2 +50%

Lag −1

Lag 0 +45% −42%

Lag +1 +47% +45% −46%

Lag +2 +47% +50% +42% −41% −41% −42%

Lag +3 +48% −41% −48%

Lag +4 −39% −48%

Lag +5 −41%

(Lin et al. JCLIM, 2009)

Page 17: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Tropical influence

(Lin et al. JCLIM, 2009)

Page 18: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Correlation when PC2 leads PC1 by 2 pentads: 0.66

Lin et al. (2010)

Page 19: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Normalized Z500 regression to PC2

Lin et al. (2010)

Page 20: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Thermal forcing

Exp1 forcing Exp2 forcing

Lin et al. (2010)

Page 21: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Z500 response

Exp1

Exp2

Lin et al. (2010)

Page 22: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

• Linear integration, winter basic state

• with a single center heating source

• Heating at different longitudes along the equator from 60E to 150W at a 10 degree interval, 16 experiments

• Z500 response at day 10

Why the response to a dipole heating is the strongest ?

Page 23: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Day 10 Z500 linear response

80E

110E

150E

Similar pattern for heating 60-100E

Similar pattern for heating 120-150W

Lin et al. MWR, 2010

Page 24: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Impact on Canadian surface air temperature

Lagged winter SAT anomaly in Canada

(Lin et al. MWR, 2009)

Page 25: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Impact on North American surface air temperature

Lagged regression of SAT with −RMM2

Page 26: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

T2m anomaly compositeAfter MJO phase 3

Page 27: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

It is possible to predict North American temperature using the MJO information

With a statistical model

For strong-MJO initial condition. Window of opportunity

Ridney et al. MWR (2013)

T(t) = a1(t)RMM1(0) + a2(t)RMM1(-1)

+b1(t)RMM2(0)+b2(t)RMM2(-1)+c(t)T(0)

Page 28: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Rodney et al. MWR, 2013

Fraction of correct temperature forecasts based on categories of above-, near-, and below-normal temperatures for MJO events with an amplitude > 2 in phases 3, 4, 7, and 8 with lead times of (a) 1, (b) 2, (c) 3, and (4) pentads.

Page 29: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Wave activity flux and 200mb streamfunction anomaly

(Lin et al. JCLIM, 2009)

Page 30: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

The MJO

The NAO

Two-way MJO – NAO interaction

Page 31: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

hindscast with GEM

GEM clim of Canadian Meteorological Centre (CMC)--

GEMCLIM 3.2.2, 50 vertical levels and 2o of horizontal resolution

1985-2008

3 times a month (1st, 11th and 21st)

10-member ensemble (balanced perturbation to NCEP reanalysis)

NCEP SST, SMIP and CMC Sea ice, Snow cover: Dewey-Heim (Steve Lambert) and CMC

45-day integrations

Page 32: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

NAO forecast skillextended winter – Nov – Marchtropical influence

A simple measure of skill:

temporal correlation btw forecast and observations

Page 33: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

(Lin et al. GRL, 2010a)

Page 34: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

(Lin et al. GRL, 2010a)

Page 35: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Correlation skill: averaged for pentads 3 and 4

Page 36: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Correlation skill: averaged for pentads 3 and 4

Page 37: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

MJO forecast skill--- impact of the NAO

Page 38: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

(Lin et al. GRL, 2010b)

Page 39: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Skill averaged for days 15-25

Page 40: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

(Lin et al. GRL, 2010b)

Page 41: Modes of variability and teleconnections: Part II Hai Lin Meteorological Research Division, Environment Canada Advanced School and Workshop on S2S ICTP,

Summary

• Two-way interactions between the MJO and NAO

• Lagged association of North American SAT with MJO

• NAO intraseasonal forecast skill influenced by the MJO

• MJO forecast skill influenced by the NAO