Status and Challenges of Dynamic Seasonal Prediction
Bin WangUniversity of Hawaii
Acknowledge contributions from co-Authors:S.-I.An, R. Wu, I.-S. Kang, J. Shukla, X. Fu, Q. Ding, T.
Li, F. Doblas-Reyes, J-Y Lee, CliPAS Team: C.-K Park, A. Kumar, B. Kirtman, J.Kinter,
Emilia K. Jin, J. Schemm, A. Rosati, N.-C. Lau, W. Stern, T. N. Krishnamurti, S.Coke, Z. S. Schubert, K.-M. Lau, and M. Sawrez, S. Schubert, J.-S. Kug, P. Liu, and X. Fu
Summer School BNU, Beijing 5 Aug. 2006
Current Status
• Review• Multi-Model Ensemble (MME) Seasonal prediction
of surface temperature and precipitation• Can MME capture the dominant modes of
interannual variability of A-AM?
Theoretical Basis for Seasonal prediction
• Conceptual break through on ENSO (Bjerkness 1966, 1999)
• Sources of seasonal prediction (Charney and Shukla 1981).
• Climate prediction as an initial value problem (Palmer 2000)
Dynamic Seasonal Prediction• Prediction of ENSO with coupled models of Intermediate
complexity (Cane and Zebiak 1985)• NCEP and ECMWF started to produce operational
ensemble forecast using AGCMs (Tracton and Kalnay 1993; Palmer et al. 1993) and two-tier system.
• Prediction of ENSO is essentially an initial value problem using CGCMs (Palmer 2000). The one-tier system. A number of meteorological centers worldwide have implemented routine dynamical seasonal predictions using one-tier system (Palmer et al. 2004; Saha et al. 2005).
• The multi-model ensemble (MME) prediction has been developed to alleviate uncertainties arising from model parameterizations and prediction errors. MME prediction performs better than any single-model component in general for both the two-tier systems (Palmer et al. 2000; Shukla et al. 2000; Barnston et al. 2003; Krishnamurti et al. 1999) and one-tier systems (Doblas-Reyes et al. 2005).
Mulit-Model Ensemble Prediction
• Development of a European Multi-Model Ensemble System for Seasonal to Inter-Annual Prediction (DEMETER) project (Palmer et al. 2004). Seven one-tier models.
• The Climate Prediction and its Application to Society (CliPAS) project is in support of Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Climate Center (APCC). Five one-tier systems and Five two-tier systems.
Development of European Multimodel Ensemble system for seasonal-to-interannual prediction One-tier prediction system using CGCM 9 ensemble members of 7 models 1980-1999 forecast
Institute AGCM Resolution OGCM Resolution
Atmosphere initial
conditionsEnsemble generation
CERFACE ARPEGE T6331 Levels OPA 8.2 2.0x2.0
31 Levels ERA-40 Windstress and SST perturbations
ECMWF IFS T9540 Levels
HOPE-E 1.4x0.3-1.429 Levels ERA-40 Windstress and
SST perturbations
INGV ECHAM-4 T4219 Levels OPA 8.1 2.0x0.5-1.5
31 Levels
CoupledAMIP-typeexperiment
Windstress and SST perturbations
LODYC IFS T9540 Levels OPA 8.2 2.0x2.0
31 Levels ERA-40 Windstress and SST perturbations
Meteo-France ARPEGE T6331 Levels OPA 8.0
182GPx152GP
31 LevelsERA-40 Windstress and
SST perturbations
MPI ECHAM-5 T4219 Levels MPI-OM1 2.5x0.5-2.5
23 Levels
Coupled run relaxed to
observed SSTs
Atmosphericconditions from the coupled initialization run (lagged method)
UK Met Office HadAM3 2.5x3.7519 Levels
GloSea OGCM based on HadCM3
1.25x0.3-12540 Levels ERA-40 Windstress and
SST perturbations
DEMETER model Specification
Institute AGCM ResolutionEnsembl
e Member
Reference
FSU FSUGCM T63 L27 10 Cocke, S. and T.E. LaRow (2000)
GFDL AM2 2o lat x 2.5o lon L24 10 Anderson et al. (2004)
SNU/KMA GCPS T63 L21 6 Kang et al. (2004)
UH CAM2 T42 L26 10 Liu et al. (2005)
UH ECHAM4 T31 L19 10 Roeckner et al. (1996)
Institute AGCM Resoluti
on OGCM ResolutionEnsembl
e Member
Reference
*FRCGC ECHAM4 T106 L19 OPA 8.2 2o cos(lat)x2o lon L31 9 Luo et al. (2005)
NASA NSIPP12o lat x 2.5o
lon L34Poseidon
V41/3o lat x 5/8o lon L27 3
Vintzileos et al. (2005)
*NCEP GFS T62 L64 MOM3 1/3o lat x 1o lon L40 15 Saha et al. (2005)
*SNU SNU T42 L21 MOM2.2 1/3o lat x 1o lon L32 6 Kug et al. (2005)
UH ECHAM4 T31 L19 UH Ocean 1o lat x 2o lon L2 10 Fu and Wang (2001)
APCC 1-Tier Models
APCC 2-Tier Models
APCC/CliPAS model Specifications
•Superior to the persistence except JJA SE Africa and SWIO.•Two MMEs similar. DEMETER better over the Asia, but CliPAS is better over the North America-North Atlantic. •Tropical Pacific: JJA better in the region between 10N and 20N (north of the ITCZ) Tropical IO: the local summer surface temperature is better predicted than local winter season. Tropical Atlantic better during the local winter. Role fo ENSO.•Poleward of 20N and 20S, higher in local winter than local summer: North Pacific and Atlantic, SPCZ. Role of westerly Jet.
•JJA and along 35N-50N
Temporal Correlation / 2m Air Temperature
Temporal Correlation / Precipitation
•Two MMEs similar. DEMETER MME better in DJF over the East Asia and eastern tropical Africa. •The high skills : the tropical Pacific between 10S and 20N, MC, and the northeast Brazil and the equatorial Atlantic Ocean•Western Hemisphere tropics is better. Hoarse show low-skill region in the EH.•Land regions are lacking skills. During DJF ENSO impacts extends to Land.•DJF is better than JJA. Particularly in (a) the subtropical NP and NA (20-40N); (b) EIO; (c) SPCZ; (d) the northern South America, (e) Southern Africa; (f) Mexico and southern United States, and (g) Southeast Asia. •However, over Southeast South America-southwest AO (20S-35S, 10W-50W) and east Australia, JJA (local winter) better. •JJA: midlatitude wavelike patterns of moderate skill is notable.
Figure 11. Scatter diagram of anomaly pattern correlation between precipitation prediction over ENSO and A-AM regions using CliPAS (a, c) and DEMETER (b, d) system in summer and winter, respectively.
Prediction Skill over ENSO versus A-AM region Precipitation
Figure 9. MME effective index and 2-D diagram of pattern correlation and normalized RMSE for precipitation prediction in summer (a) and winter (b). Black color indicates the skill over Monsoon region and grey color indicates that over ENSO region. Filled round (square) dot and contoured round (square) dot represent the averaged skill of models and MME skill in CliPAS (DEMETER) system, respectively.
MME Effective Index / Precipitation
Figure 10. Range of pattern correlation coefficients between the observed and predicted precipitation (a, b) and temperature (c, d) over monsoon (dark color) and ENSO (light color) regions using different number of the model being composed in blended CliPAS and DEMETER Tier-1 predictions in JJA and DJF. Marks indicate the average value of the pattern correlation coefficients for various combinations of the models composed. Upper (lower) cross mark indicates the best (worst) model composite for each number of the model being composed.
Can Multi-Model Ensemble Capture the Dominant Modes
of A-AM Variability?
Questions
1. What are the essential features of the leading modes of IAV of A-AM?
2. How well do the DEMETER and CliPASS 10 coupled climate models capture these leading modes?
Methodology: Seasona-Reliant EOF (Wang and An 2005, GRL)
Physical considerationAnomalous climate (ENSO is only an example) is often
regulated by the seasonal march of the solar radiation forcing and the resultant climatological annual cycles.
We propose Season-reliant Empirical Orthogonal Function (S-EOF) analysis to detect seasonal evolving major modes of climate variability.
Method of S-EOF AnalysisBasic Idea: Search for seasonally evolving patterns from year to year. Keys: Examine a set of sequential seasonal anomalies for one year. Coding: Constructing a covariance/correlation matrix by treating the given set of seasonal sequence as one time step (year). Interpretation: The obtained spatial patterns for each S-EOF mode describes evolving seasonal anomalies in a given year. These patterns share the same yearly value in the corresponding PC.
Fractional Variance of the first 6 S-EOF modes
30.1
13.17.1 6.6 5.5 4.5
29.4
12.57.6 5.8 5.3 4.7
28.8
17.19.4
5.6 5.3 5.0
20.713.8
10.0 6.0 4.9 4.7
57.2
17.1
6.3 3.7 2.0 1.7
51.7
13.97.0 5.1 3.7 2.8
Percentage variance (%) explained by the first six S-EOF modes of seasonal precipitation obtained from (a) CMAP, (b) GPCP, (c) ECMWF reanalysis, (d) NCEP reanalysis 2, (e) CliPAS MME prediction and (f) DEMETER MME prediction. The error bars represent one standard deviation of the sampling errors.
OBS
Reanalysis
MME prediction
S-EOF 1 of CMAP: 30%
•DEMETER and CliPAS MMEs capture spatial patterns of QB &QQ with PCC of ~0.8 for SEOF1 and 0.65-0.7 for SEOF2
S-EOF 2 of CMAP: 13%CMAP CliPAS DEMETER CMAP CliPAS DEMETER
DEMETER and CliPAS one-tier MME hindcast capture leading IAV modes of precipitation
PC-1
PC-2
PC Spectra: MMEs underestimate QB Peak and total variances
PC time series MMEs are highly
correlated with CMAP
Lead/lag correlation with Nino3.4 SSTA: MME capture
ENSO-MNS relation
SEOF2 leads ENSO 1 year
S-EOF1 concurs with ENSO
0.95
0.9
MME hindcast VS. ER40 and NCEP-2 (IAV leading modes
Taylor diagram: PCC vs. Normalized SD with Reference to CMAP and GPCP.
DEMETER and CliPAS MME have higher PCC than ER 40 and NCEP-2 reanalysis, particularly for PCs.
But MME PCs carry lower variances
Spatial patterns
PCs
S-EOF1 S-EOF2
Power spectrum of Time series of S-EOFs/ Precipitation
Fig. 9. The power spectrum density (solid line) and red noise (dashed line) of the first (left-hand panels) and the second (right-hand panels) S-EOF principal component of seasonal precipitation anomaly obtained from GFS AMIP simulation (a, e), CFS 1-month (b, f), 5-month (c, g), and 9-month (d, h) lead time forecast, respectively.
Correlation Skill of EV and PC Predicted by CFS
Fig. 10. Pattern correlation of eigenvector and temporal correlation of principle component predicted by CFS with forecast lead time up to 9 month for (a) the 1st mode of SEOF and (b) the 2nd mode of SEOF.
How well do the coupled models capture the leading modes of precipitation anomalies?
---The CMAP anomalies show a Quasi-Biennial (QB) and Low-frequency (LF) mode, which accounts for ~ 30% and 13% of the total variance. The QB mode concurs with but LF mode leads ENSO by ~one year. --The MMEs capture both the spatial patterns and temporal evolutions of the two modes with correlation coefficients higher than their counterparts in re-analyses (ER 40 and NCEP2). --However, the MMEs significantly underestimate the biennial tendency of first mode and the temporal variability of the two modes, as well as the “background” noise. These deficiencies limit the MME predictive skill.
Challenges:Monsoon prediction
SCIENTIFIC BASIS for climate prediction
Charney and Shukla 1981
“Atmospheric climate variation in the tropics should be more predictable because it was largely due to slowly varying lower boundary (especially SST)”.
Tier-2 strategies
Palmer (2000)
Prediction of seasonal climate fluctuations is essentially an initial value problem. Unlike the weather prediction, predictability arises from a memory of initial conditions in the ocean (as well as land surface).
Tier-1 strategies
Two –tier climate prediction systemBengtsson, L., U. Schlese, E. Roeckner, M.
Latif, T. Barnett, and N. Graham, 1993: A two-tiered approach to long-range climate forecasting. Science, 261, 1026-1029. Graham and Barnett 1995.
Under the influence of slowly varying boundary forcing, the atmospheric model should be able to capture the predictable portion of tropical rainfall.
Given observed SST forcingCan AGCMs
simulate A-AM precipitation anomalies?
11 AGCMsAMIP type 10-member ensemble simulation
Observed SST and sea ice as LB forcing2-year period (9/1996-8/1998)
Wang, Kang, Lee 2004 J. Climate
Precipitation (shading) and SST (contour)
Observation All-Model Composite
J J A1997
SON1997
J J A1998
J J A1997
SON1997
J J A1998
J J A1997
SON1997
J J A1998
J J A1997
SON1997
J J A1998
mm/day
Latitu
de
Latitu
de
Latitu
de
Longitude Longitude
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
COLA DNM GEOS GFDL IAP IITM MRI NCAR NCEP SNU SUNY Comp
- 0.6
- 0.4
- 0.2
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
- 0.6
- 0.4
- 0.2
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
- 0.6
- 0.4
- 0.2
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
(a) Southeast Asian and WNP region
J J A97 SON97 J J A98
(b) The rest of the A- AM domain
J J A97 SON97 J J A98
-0.2
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
COLA DNM GEOS GFDL IAP IITM MRI NCAR NCEP SNU SUNY Comp
A question of fundamental importance to climate simulation and prediction: Why are all AGCMs, when given the observed lower-boundary forcing, unable to simulate summer monsoon precipitation anomalies? Even with the extremely strong 1997/98 forcing!
Bad model climatology? Bad tropical teleconnection?Bad model physics??Or something else!
Prediction skill for JJA rainfall (2 years) 11-model ensemble mean
A major finding All models tend to yield positive SST-rainfall
correlations in the summer monsoon that are at odds with observations.
A HYPOTHESIS was raisedTreating monsoon as a slave to prescribed
SST results in the models’ failure.
Or AMIP strategy is inadequate for simulating monsoon rainfall.
How well are the Asian summer monsoon rainfall hindcasted in the Two-Tier MME prediction?
NCEP, NSIPP, JMA, KMA, SNU MME: Multi-Model Ensemble
AMIP type (Observed SST forcing) ensemble hindcast
6 to 10-member ensemble21-year period (1979-2001)
5-AGCM EM hindcast skill (21Yr)
OBS SST-rainfall correlation Model SST-rainfall correlation
• Two-tier system was unable to predict ASM rainfall. •TTS tends to yield positive SST-rainfall correlations in SM region that are at odds with observation (negative). •Treating monsoon as a slave to prescribed SST results in the failure.
PPC is nearly zero in ASM region
Wang et al. 2005
Two-tier MME hindcast of summer MNS rainfall
(Wang et al. 2005)
Area averaged correlation coefficients (skills)
El Nino region (10oS-5oN, 80oW-180oW)
WNP (5-30oN, 110-150oE)
Asian-Pacific MNS (5-30oN, 70-150oE)
Fig.3
Observed Rainfall-SST correlation (1979-2002)
RainfallLeads SST by 1-month
SST leads Rainfall by 1-month
Simultatious
Coupled model Experiments
IPRC Hybrid Coupled Atmosphere-Ocean Model
Atmosphere: ECHAM4 T30 AGCM
Ocean:WLF intermediate ocean model (0.5x0.5)(Wang et al. 95, Fu and Wang 2001)
50 year integration
Contour indicates 95% significant level
Lagged cross-correlations between SST and precipitation anomalies. Negative correlation with SST lagging the atmosphere suggests that o-to-a feedbacks are weak.
SSTlags
SSTleads
SummarySSTA in heavy precipitating summer monsoon
region is largely a result of atmospheric forcing. Treating monsoon as a slave to prescribed SST results in the models’ failure.
An AGCM, coupled with an ocean model, simulated realistic SST-rainfall relationships; however, the same AGCM fails when forced by the same SSTs that are generated in its coupled run.
Neglect of atmospheric feedback makes the forced solution depart from the coupled solution in the presence
of initial noises or tiny errors in the lower boundary. Coupled ocean-atmosphere processes are extremely
important in the heavy precipitating monsoon convergence zones where the atmospheric feedback to SST is essential.
Issues
• How predictable is the AAM IAV? What factors limit climate models’ predictability?
• Other potential sources of predictability? Importance of land processes
• Can we improve seasonal prediction besides getting better models?
• Is monsoon ISO a contributor or a trouble maker to seasonal prediction?
• How to improve the coupled models?
Shinoda et al. 2003
Land surface process provide memories up to a season?
Koster et al. 2004
Hot places of land surface feedback
Climatological Pentad Mean Precipitation
(a) Indian Monsoon Region
(b) Western North Pacific Region
Month
mm
/da
ym
m/d
ay
Month
AGCMs simulate climatology poorly over the WNP heat source region
ISM (5-30N, 65-105E)
WNPSM(5-25N, 110-150E)
Diurnal cycle biases (Yang and Slingo 2001)
UKMO Unified Model
Satellite
Local time of peak precipitation
• Satellite shows early evening peak over land, early morning peak over ocean ITCZ.
• Models show late morning peak over land, midnight peak over ocean.
•ISV Variance is too small •MJO variance does not come from pronounced spectral peak but from over reddened spectrum: too strong persistence of equatorial precipitation (13/14)
Prediction Needs
• Design metrics for objective, quantitative assessing predictability and prediction skill.
• Improve MME prediction system and study combined EM and probabilistic forecast.
• Improve initialization scheme and initial conditions and representation of slow coupled physics.
• Develop new strategy and methodology for sub-seasonal monsoon prediction.
• Better understand physical basis for seasonal prediction and ways to predict uncertainties of the prediction (Palmer 2004).