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Published April 15, 2019 | Version v1
Poster Open

Investigating the drivers of midlatitude circulation biases in climate reanalysis ensembles

Creators

  • 1. Stefan

Description

The projected response of the atmospheric circulation to radiative changes driven by increasing greenhouse gas concentrations is highly uncertain. One of the primary reasons for this is that the state-of-the-art models we employ to investigate these responses struggle to represent basic features of the midlatitude circulation such as storm tracks, jets and blocking. Biases also have detrimental effects on predictive skill for dynamically driven fields at climate prediction time scales of seasons to decades. Despite this, physical understanding of the controls on these features and the drivers of their biases is still limited. The present study investigates a hierarchy of large ensemble climate reanalysis and hindcast simulations performed using the Norwegian Earth System Model (NorESM). Each ensemble is 30 members and was run from 1985-2010 and monthly means calculated. For the reanalysis runs various data-assimilation strategies were employed. These are SST only (V0), SST plus hydrographic profiles (V1), SST plus hydrographic profiles plus sea-ice concentration (V2). The assimilation was performed monthly, after which the model runs freely. This choice likely has implications for the evolution of the biases in both the SSTs and atmospheric circulation. To investigate this, and attempt to elucidate drivers, we include analyses from a one-year simulation with daily to hourly output. The data-assimilated runs are compared to both free runs and AMIP-style simulations with ERA-Interim serving as ground truth. We evaluate the North Pacific and North Atlantic jets in winter and summer. We also identify where the observations lie within the predictive distribution of the ensemble. Results show that the North Atlantic jet is too zonal, extends too far into Europe and is shifted northwards. Virtually the entire North Atlantic sector lies outside the predictive distribution of the ensemble and performance actually degrades in the simulations with tighter constraints on the assimilation. By contrast the North Pacific jet is rather better represented in all aspects both with respect to pattern as well as magnitude of the biases. This is likely due to the better-represented teleconnections between the tropical and extratropical Pacific. Comparison of these ensembles with AMIP simulations suggests that the errors in the midlatitude circulation reside in the atmospheric component of the model. Further, the large SST biases (even in the data assimilated runs) suggest a too weak coupling between ocean and atmosphere, which exacerbates the problem. We also present results from hindcast simulations where NorCPM was initialized at different times of the year and then run forward 12 months. The initialized simulations show decreased skill with time of initialization (e.g. summer vs. winter) having an effect. Implications and causes of the varying behavior among the ensembles are discussed as well as prospects for the future.

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EGU_2019_BiasesPoster_SobolowskiEA.pdf

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