contributed by Boris Dewitte1, Dasha Gushchina 2 and Yves duPenhoat 1
1LEGOS/CNES/IRD
14 Av. E. Belin, 31401 Toulouse Cedex 4, France
2Meteorological
Department, Geographical Faculty, Moscow State University, Vorobyevy
gory,
Moscow, 119899, Russia
Forecasts of the tropical Pacific SST are presented here using two intermediate coupled models. The oceanic component consists in a three baroclinic mode ocean and the mixed layer model differs from the Cane and Zebiak (1987) model in the parameterization of the vertical advection terms and the basic state (cf. Dewitte, 2000). The atmospheric component is either a statistical atmospheric model based on the singular value decomposition (SVD) of observed sea surface temperature (SST) and wind stress anomalies (see Périgaud et al., 2000) or a Gill(1980)'s dynamical tropical atmosphere. Initial conditions for the prediction runs are produced in a coupled mode by nudging the observed winds (FSU winds for the period 1961-1992, ERS1-2 winds from may 1992 until september 2000, QuikSCAT winds from october 2000) to the simulated winds as in Chen et al. (1995). The skill of the models for the NINO3 SST index over various periods and for the 1997-1998 El Niño is presented in Dewitte et al. (2002).
Figure 1 shows model predicted SST and wind stress anomalies in the tropical Pacific for the next four seasons in the case of the statistical atmosphere (model 1). These are ensemble averages of 12 forecasts started from Jun-Jul-Aug 2005 conditions. For producing the initial conditions of the individual forecasts, random noise was added to the system with an approach similar to Kirtman and Schopf (1998). Model 1 is predicting quasi neutral conditions for the rest of 2005 and beginning of 2006 whereas Model 2 (Figure 2) is predicting slightly warm conditions by the end of the year.
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.
References:
Chen, D., S. E. Zebiak, A. J. Busalacchi, and M. A. Cane, 1995: An improved procedure for El Niño forecasting: Implication for predictability. Science, 269, 1699-1702.
Dewitte B., 2000: Sensitivity of an intermediate coupled ocean-atmosphere model of the tropical Pacific to its oceanic vertical structure. J. Climate, 13, 2363-2388.
Dewitte B., D. Gushchina, Y. duPenhoat and S. Lakeev, 2002: On the importance of subsurface variability for ENSO simulation and prediction with intermediate coupled models of the Tropical Pacific: A case study for the 1997-1998 El Niño. Geoph. Res. Lett., vol. 29, no. 14, 1666, 10.1029/2001GL014452.
Gill, A., Some simple solutions heat-induced tropical circulation. Q. J. R. Meteorol. Soc., 106, 447-462, 1980.
Kirtman, B. P. and P. S. Schopf, 1998: Decadal variability in ENSO predictability an prediction, J. Climate, 11, 2804-2822
Périgaud C. C. Cassou, B. Dewitte, L.-L. Fu and D. Neelin, 2000: Using data and intermediate coupled models for seasonal-to-interannual forecasts. Mon. Wea. Rev., 128, 3025-3049.
Zebiak, S. E. and M. A. Cane, 1987: A model El Niño-Southern Oscillation. Mon. Wea. Rev., 115, 2262-2278.
Figure Captions:
Fig. 1:
model forecast of tropical Pacific SST (°C) and wind stress
(Dyn/cm2)
anomalies for SON 2005, DJF
2005/2006, MAM 2006 and JJA 2006.
Each forecast
is an ensemble average of 12 sets of prediction runs initialized from
wind
forced model outputs perturbated by random noise. Observed data through
30th of August 2005 was used to produce the forecast.
Contour
interval 0.5°C. Regions with SSTA amplitude larger than 0.5°C (lower
than -0.5°C) are in yellow-orange (blue). The longuest wind stress
arrow
on each map corresponds to the value indicated on the right hand side.
Only wind stress anomalies for which wind modulus is larger than 0.1
Dyn/cm2
are plotted.
Fig.2:
same as Fig. 1 but for the coupled
model
using the dynamical atmosphere.