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Current and emerging developments in subseasonal to decadal prediction

Authors :
Barcelona Supercomputing Center
Merryfield, William J.
Baehr, Johanna
Batté, Lauriane
Becker, Emily J.
Butler, Amy H.
Coelho, Caio A.S.
Danabasoglu, Gorkhan
Dirmeyer, Paul A.
Doblas-Reyes, Francisco
Domeisen, Daniela I.V.
Ferranti, Laura
Ilynia, Tatiana
Kumar, Arun
Müller, Wolfang A.
Rixen, Michel
Robertson, Andrew W.
Smith, Doug M.
Takayaka, Yuhei
Tuma, Matthias
Vitart, Frederic
White, Christopher J.
Alvarez, Mariano S.
Ardilouze, Constantin
Attard, Hannah
Baggett, Cory
Balsameda, Magdalena A.
Beraki, Asmeron F.
Bhattacharjee, Partha S.
Bilbao, Roberto
Andrade, Felipe M. de
DeFlorio, Michael J.
Díaz, Leandro B.
Ehsan, Muhammad Azhar
Fragkoulidis, Georgios
Grainger, Sam
Green, Benjamin W.
Hell, Momme C.
Infanti, Johanna M.
Isensee, Katharina
Kataoka, Takahito
Kirtman, Ben P.
Klingaman, Nicholas P.
Lee, June-Yi
Mayer, Kristen
McKay, Roseanna
Mecking, Jennifer V
Miller, Douglas E.
Neddermann, Nele
Justin Ng, Ching Ho
Ossó, Albert
Pankatz, Klaus
Peatman, Simon
Pegion, Kathy
Perlwitz, Judith
Recalde-Coronel, G. Cristina
Reintges, Annika
Renkl, Christoph
Solaraju-Murali, Balakrishnan
Spring, Aaron
Stan, Cristiana
Sun, Y. Qiang
Tozer, Carly R.
Vigaud, Nicolas
Woolnough, Steven
Yeager, Stephen
Barcelona Supercomputing Center
Merryfield, William J.
Baehr, Johanna
Batté, Lauriane
Becker, Emily J.
Butler, Amy H.
Coelho, Caio A.S.
Danabasoglu, Gorkhan
Dirmeyer, Paul A.
Doblas-Reyes, Francisco
Domeisen, Daniela I.V.
Ferranti, Laura
Ilynia, Tatiana
Kumar, Arun
Müller, Wolfang A.
Rixen, Michel
Robertson, Andrew W.
Smith, Doug M.
Takayaka, Yuhei
Tuma, Matthias
Vitart, Frederic
White, Christopher J.
Alvarez, Mariano S.
Ardilouze, Constantin
Attard, Hannah
Baggett, Cory
Balsameda, Magdalena A.
Beraki, Asmeron F.
Bhattacharjee, Partha S.
Bilbao, Roberto
Andrade, Felipe M. de
DeFlorio, Michael J.
Díaz, Leandro B.
Ehsan, Muhammad Azhar
Fragkoulidis, Georgios
Grainger, Sam
Green, Benjamin W.
Hell, Momme C.
Infanti, Johanna M.
Isensee, Katharina
Kataoka, Takahito
Kirtman, Ben P.
Klingaman, Nicholas P.
Lee, June-Yi
Mayer, Kristen
McKay, Roseanna
Mecking, Jennifer V
Miller, Douglas E.
Neddermann, Nele
Justin Ng, Ching Ho
Ossó, Albert
Pankatz, Klaus
Peatman, Simon
Pegion, Kathy
Perlwitz, Judith
Recalde-Coronel, G. Cristina
Reintges, Annika
Renkl, Christoph
Solaraju-Murali, Balakrishnan
Spring, Aaron
Stan, Cristiana
Sun, Y. Qiang
Tozer, Carly R.
Vigaud, Nicolas
Woolnough, Steven
Yeager, Stephen
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Climate prediction on subseasonal to decadal time scales is a rapidly advancing field that is synthesizing improvements in climate process understanding and modeling to improve and expand operational services worldwide. Weather and climate variations on subseasonal to decadal timescales can have enormous social, economic and environmental impacts, making skillful predictions on these timescales a valuable tool for decision makers. As such, there is a growing interest in the scientific, operational, and applications communities in developing forecasts to improve our foreknowledge of extreme events. On subseasonal to seasonal (S2S) timescales, these include high-impact meteorological events such as tropical cyclones, extratropical storms, floods, droughts, and heat and cold waves. On seasonal to decadal (S2D) timescales, while the focus broadly remains similar, (e.g., on precipitation, surface and upper ocean temperatures and their effects on the probabilities of high-impact meteorological events), understanding the roles of internal and externally-forced variability such as anthropogenic warming in forecasts also becomes important. The S2S and S2D communities share common scientific and technical challenges. These include forecast initialization and ensemble generation; initialization shock and drift; understanding the onset of model systematic errors; bias correction, calibration, and forecast quality assessment; model resolution; atmosphere-ocean coupling; sources and expectations for predictability; and linking research, operational forecasting, and end user needs. In September 2018 a coordinated pair of international conferences, framed by the above challenges, was organized jointly by the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) and the World Weather Research Programme (WWRP). These conferences surveyed the state of S2S and S2D prediction, ongoing research, and future needs, providing an ideal basis for synthesizing current and emerging developments in these area<br />The International Conferences on Subseasonal to Decadal Prediction on which this paper is based were sponsored by: US CLIVAR, NSF, UCAR, NCAR and its Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory (CGD), NOAA’s Climate Variability and Predictability (CVP) and Modeling, Analysis, Predictions and Projections (MAPP) Programs, Copernicus Climate Change Service, IPSL, and WWRP/WCRP’s Subseasonal-to-Seasonal (S2S) Prediction Project.<br />Postprint (author's final draft)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
88 p., application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1159674622
Document Type :
Electronic Resource