Forecasts of Nino-3 SST Anomalies and SOI Based on Singular
Spectrum Analysis Combined with the Maximum Entropy Method
contributed by
Dmitri Kondrashov, Michael Ghil and J. David Neelin
Department
of Atmospheric Sciences and Institute of Geophysics and Planetary
Physics,
University of California, Los Angeles, California
Singular spectrum analysis (SSA: Vautard
and Ghil 1989) and the maximum entropy method (MEM: Penland et al.1991) are
combined to produce long-lead
forecasts of sea-surface temperature (SST)
anomalies averaged over the Nino-3 area and of the Southern Oscillation Index
(SOI). The forecast is for up to one year ahead based on data from January 1950
to November 2004.This forecast follows up on earlier forecasts using combined
SSA-MEM methodology for the SOI index by C. Keppenne and M. Ghil, starting in
the March 1992 issue of this Bulletin, on those of N. Jiang, M. Ghil and J. D.
Neelin for Nino-3 SST anomalies, starting from March 1995, and on those of A.
Saunders, M. Ghil and J. D. Neelin from September 1997. Detailed information on
the forecast method can be found in Keppenne and Ghil (1992) and in the March
1995 issue of this Bulletin (also Jiang et al. 1995). Briefly, the time series
is filtered by SSA so that only the statistically significant low-frequency
components are retained. Next, MEM is applied to advance these components in
time. The extended components are then used in the SSA reconstruction to
produce the forecast values. Figure 1 shows the method's
Nino-3 SSTA forecasts for lead times of 3, 6, 9 and 12 months, from 1996 to the
present. The forecast for each point utilizes only the appropriate part of the
record that precedes the initial forecast time.
The current SSA-MEM forecast for Nino-3
SSTA (Fig. 2) is for a cooling trend in the first half
of 2005, returning to normal conditions from the current mild El Nino. The
forecast SOI index (Fig. 3) is for likewise returns to
normal, consistent with the SSTA forecast.
References:
Ghil, M., and N. Jiang, 1998: Recent forecast skill for the El
Nino/Southern Oscillation. Geophys. Res. Lett.,25, 171-174.
Ghil, M., M. R. Allen, M. D. Dettinger, K. Ide, D. Kondrashov, M.
E. Mann, A. W. Robertson, A. Saunders, Y. Tian, F. Varadi, and P. Yiou, 2002:
Advanced spectral methods for climatic time series, Rev. Geophys., 40(1),
pp. 3.1-3.41, 10.1029/2000GR000092.
Jiang, N., D. Neelin and M. Ghil, 1995: Quasi-quadrennial and
quasi-biennial variability in the equatorial Pacific. Clim. Dyn., 12,
101-112.
Keppenne, C.L. and M. Ghil, 1992: Adaptive filtering and
prediction of the Southern Oscillation Index. J. Geophys. Res, 97,20449-20454.
Penland, C., M. Ghil and K. M. Weickmann, 1991: Adaptive filtering
and maximum entropy spectra, with application to changes in atmospheric angular
momentum. J. Geophys. Res., 96, 22, 659-22, 671.
Vautard, R., and M. Ghil, 1989: Singular spectrum analysis in
nonlinear dynamics with applications to paleoclimatic time series. Physica D,
35, 395-424.
Figure Captions:
Fig. 1 . Forecasts
of the area-averaged Nino-3 SST anomalies (SSTAs) using the SSA-MEM scheme.
Forecasts from 1996 are for lead times of (a) 3 months,(b) 6 months, (c) 9
months, and (d) 12 months. The dot-dashed lines are situated each at a distance
of one standard deviation from the SSA-MEM forecasts. The standard deviation
value is based on forecast verification over the 1990-2000 time span.
Fig. 2. Forecast
Nino-3 SSTAs for the upcoming four seasons using the SSA-MEM scheme. The
magenta line connects the observed Nino-3 SSTAs through May 2004, and the blue
line is SSA filtered SST. The red line indicates the SSA-MEM forecasts for the
next 4 seasons, together with the respective error bars (vertical black lines).
Fig.3. SSA-MEM
forecast of the SOI for the upcoming four seasons. The magenta line is the
observed SOI index, the blue line is the SSA-filtered SOI. The red line
indicates the forecast for the next 4 seasons, together with the respective
error bars (vertical black lines).