Dynamically Based Forecasts for Tropical Pacific SST
Using a Hybrid Coupled Ocean-Atmospheric Model
contributed by
Tim Barnett1, David Pierce1, Nicholas Graham1
and Mojib Latif2
1Scripps
Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California
2Max
Planck Institut fur Meteorologie, Hamburg, Germany
Forecasts of the tropical Pacific SST are
presented here using a hybrid coupled ocean-atmosphere model (HCM) developed
jointly at Scripps Institution and the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology
(MPI) (Barnett et al. 1993). The original HCM-1 ocean model, created at MPI
(Latif 1987), is a fully nonlinear GCM bounded by 30N-30S latitude and by Asia
and South America. It has 13 vertical levels, with 10 in the top 300 m. The
seasonal cycle is governed by a Newtonian heat flux and observed wind stress
(Goldenberg and O'Brien 1981). The vertical mixing scheme is dependent upon the
Richardson number (Pacanowski and Philander 1981). The atmospheric model is statistical,
deriving the wind stress forcing for the ocean GCM using the GCM's SST. This is
done with a CCA-like regression model, using historical observed fields of SST
and the corresponding wind stress. The coupling process includes a MOS-like
statistical correction of the SST fields produced by the ocean GCM. The HCM is
initialized with wind stress fields derived from observed SST data; thus, it is
indirectly "spun up" with SST information. Over the 1965-93 period
the model demonstrated statistically significant predictive skill out to 12-18
months, with best performance for the central equatorial Pacific and for winter
forecasts (Barnett et al. 1993). The model was developed using data from
1965-85, leaving 1986 onward for independent forecasting.The improved HCM-3
(Pierce 1996) is similar to the HCM-1 in most respects. The main difference is
in the ocean GCM used, which is the HOPE2 from the Max Planck Institute in
Hamburg (Wolff and Maier-Reimer 1992). While the resolution is approximately as
in HCM-1, the numerical scheme is improved to reduce the numerical diffusion,
especially in the vertical, resulting in a better representation of the main
thermocline across the tropical Pacific. A MOS corrector is still used, but the
magnitude of the correction is generally only 1C or less--a marked improvement
over HCM-1. Statistical atmospheres were constructed using both the FSU and the
da Silva (da Silva et al. 1994) wind data sets. Model performance was
independent of which set was used, as long as a 3 to 5 month smoother was
applied to the wind stress prior to model construction. The final model used
the da Silva wind data. Model anomalies are calculated relative to climatology
based on the period 1965-1993, using da Silva's SST data set.The HCM-3 model
produces better hindcasts than did HCM-1, with correlation skill scores
exceeding 0.8 for 3-6 month lead times covering most of the tropical Pacific,
dropping to 0.6 in the far west. The skill is also moderately high nearly to the
South American coast. Independent sample forecast skills are approximately
comparable to those of the LDEO and NCEP models. In similar fashion to the
LDEO, skills for the 1980s and early 1990s are much higher than during the
1970s. The Hybrid Coupled Model is predicting warm conditions in the tropical Pacific
for the middle part of 2004. Caveat: The forecasts shown above are experimental
in nature. The reader is forewarned that the methods/forecasts are new and
subject to future change and improvement.
Acknowledgment: This
work is supported by NOAA and the National Science Foundation's Climate
Dynamics Division.
References:
Barnett, T.P., M. Latif, N. Graham, M.
Flugel, S. Pazan and W. White, 1993: ENSO and ENSO-related predictability: Part
1 - Prediction of equatorial Pacific sea surface temperatures with a hybrid
coupled ocean-atmosphere model. J. Climate, 6, 1545-1566.
Da Silva, A.M., C.C.Young and S. Levitus, 1994: Atlas of surface
marine data 1994, Vol. 1: Algorithms and procedures. NOAA Atlas NESDIS 6, U.S. Department
of Commerce, 83 pp.
Goldenberg, S.D. and J.J. O'Brien, 1981: Time and space
variability of tropical Pacific wind stress. Mon. Wea. Rev., 109,
1190-1207.
Latif, M., 1987: Tropical ocean circulation experiments. J. Phys.
Oceanogr., 17, 246-263.
Pacanowski, R.C. and S.G.H. Philander, 1981: Parameterization of
vertical mixing in numerical models of tropical oceans. J. Phys. Oceanogr.,
11, 1443-1451.
Pierce, D. W., 1996: The Hybrid Coupled Model, Version 3: Technical
Notes. SIO Reference Series No. 96-27, Scripps Institution of Oceanography,
University of California, San Diego.
Wolff, J.-O. And E Maier-Reimer, 1992: HOPE, the Hamburg ocean
primitive equation model. 81 pp. Available from Max Planck Institut fur Meteorologie,
Hamburg, Germany.
Figure Captions:
Fig. 1. Scripps/MPI hybrid coupled model
(HCM-3) forecast of tropical Pacific SST anomaly (C) for DJF 2003/2004, MAM
2004, JJA 2004, and SON 2004. Observed data through 6 December 2003 was used to
produce the forecast. contour interval 0.25C, but contours of magnitude less
than 0.5C are not shown.