Search Results

You are looking at 41 - 50 of 52 items for

  • Author or Editor: Andrew Hoell x
  • Refine by Access: All Content x
Clear All Modify Search
Andrew Hoell
,
Xiao-Wei Quan
,
Martin Hoerling
,
Rong Fu
,
Justin Mankin
,
Isla Simpson
,
Richard Seager
,
Cenlin He
,
Flavio Lehner
,
Joel Lisonbee
,
Ben Livneh
, and
Amanda Sheffield
Open access
Tao Zhang
,
Martin P. Hoerling
,
Klaus Wolter
,
Jon Eischeid
,
Linyin Cheng
,
Andrew Hoell
,
Judith Perlwitz
,
Xiao-Wei Quan
, and
Joseph Barsugli

Abstract

The failed Southern California (SCAL) winter rains during the 2015/16 strong El Niño came as a surprise and a disappointment. Similarities were drawn to very wet winters during several historical strong El Niño events, leading to heightened expectations that SCAL’s multiyear drought would abate in 2016. Ensembles of atmospheric model simulations and coupled model seasonal forecasts are diagnosed to determine both the potential predictability and actual prediction skill of the failed rains, with a focus on understanding the striking contrast of SCAL precipitation between the 2016 and 1998 strong El Niño events. The ensemble mean of simulations indicates that the December–February 2016 winter dryness was not a response to global boundary forcings, which instead generated a wet SCAL signal. Nor was the extreme magnitude of observed 1998 wetness entirely reconcilable with a boundary-forced signal, indicating it was not a particularly precise analog for 2016. Furthermore, model simulations indicate the SCAL 2016 wet signal was 20%–50% less intense than its simulated 1998 counterpart. Such a weaker signal was captured in November 2015 initialized seasonal forecasts, indicating dynamical model skill in predicting a less prolific 2016 rainy season and a capability to forewarn that 2016 would not likely experience the flooding rains of 1998. Analysis of ensemble spread indicates that 2016 dryness was an extreme climate event having less than 5% likelihood in the presence of 2016 global forcings, even though its probability of occurrence was 3–4 times greater in 2016 compared to 1998. Therefore, the failed seasonal rains themselves are argued to be primarily a symptom of subseasonal variability unrelated to boundary forcings whose predictability remains to be explored.

Full access
Brant Liebmann
,
Ileana Bladé
,
Chris Funk
,
Dave Allured
,
Xiao-Wei Quan
,
Martin Hoerling
,
Andrew Hoell
,
Pete Peterson
, and
Wassila M. Thiaw

Abstract

The 1981–2014 climatology and variability of the March–May eastern Horn of Africa boreal spring wet season are examined using precipitation, upper- and lower-level winds, low-level specific humidity, and convective available potential energy (CAPE), with the aim of better understanding the establishment of the wet season and the cause of the recent observed decline. At 850 mb, the development of the wet season is characterized by increasing specific humidity and winds that veer from northeasterly in February to southerly in June and advect moisture into the region, in agreement with an earlier study. Equally important, however, is a substantial weakening of the 200-mb climatological easterly winds in March. Likewise, the shutdown of the wet season coincides with the return of strong easterly winds in June. Similar changes are seen in the daily evolution of specific humidity and 200-mb wind when composited relative to the interannual wet season onset and end, with the easterlies decreasing (increasing) several days prior to the start (end) of the wet season. The 1981–2014 decrease in March–May precipitation has also coincided with an increase in 200-mb easterly winds, with no attendant change in specific humidity, leading to the conclusion that, while high values of specific humidity are an important ingredient of the wet season, the recent observed precipitation decline has resulted mostly from a strengthening of the 200-mb easterlies. This change in the easterly winds appears to be related to an increase in convection over the Indonesian region and in the associated outflow from that enhanced heat source.

Full access
Andrew Hoell
,
Rachel Robinson
,
Laurie Agel
,
Mathew Barlow
,
Melissa Breeden
,
Jon Eischeid
,
Amy McNally
,
Kimberly Slinksi
, and
Xiao-Wei Quan

Abstract

We diagnose physical factors related to frequent compound drought and heat extremes over a Middle East and Southwest Asia (MESA; 30°−40°N, 35°−65°E) region in a recent (1999- 2022) compared to a prior (1951-1998) period. The recent compound extremes were related to conflict, disease transmission, and water shortages in this already semi-arid region. Observed estimates and four transient climate model ensembles are used to identify the effect of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and atmospheric forcing by greenhouse gases and aerosols on these compound extremes in autumn (September-November), winter (December-February), spring (March-May), and summer (June-August) that may lead to practical forecast skill for future compound events.

Observations and climate models indicate that MESA compound drought and heat in the autumn, winter, and spring wet seasons for the recent period were related to the La Niña phase of ENSO and an attendant northward shift of the storm track that hinders precipitation-bearing storms from moving through MESA. A comparison of different conditions in the model simulations are used to isolate the effects of La Niña and the atmospheric forcing by greenhouse gases and aerosols on compound MESA drought and heat. A comparison of recent and prior periods in the climate models, which isolates the effects of the atmospheric forcing, indicates that greenhouse gases and aerosols are related to the increases in MESA heat frequency in all seasons. A comparison of La Niña to ENSO neutral and El Niño in the recent period of the climate models indicates that La Niña is related to increases in MESA drought frequency in the wet seasons.

Restricted access
Donald Murray
,
Andrew Hoell
,
Martin Hoerling
,
Judith Perlwitz
,
Xiao-Wei Quan
,
Dave Allured
,
Tao Zhang
,
Jon Eischeid
,
Catherine A. Smith
,
Joseph Barsugli
,
Jeff McWhirter
,
Chris Kreutzer
, and
Robert S. Webb

Abstract

The Facility for Weather and Climate Assessments (FACTS) developed at the NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory is a freely available resource that provides the science community with analysis tools; multimodel, multiforcing climate model ensembles; and observational/reanalysis datasets for addressing a wide class of problems on weather and climate variability and its causes. In this paper, an overview of the datasets, the visualization capabilities, and data dissemination techniques of FACTS is presented. In addition, two examples are given that show the use of the interactive analysis and visualization feature of FACTS to explore questions related to climate variability and trends. Furthermore, we provide examples from published studies that have used data downloaded from FACTS to illustrate the types of research that can be pursued with its unique collection of datasets.

Free access
Andrew Hoell
,
Xiao-Wei Quan
,
Martin Hoerling
,
Henry F. Diaz
,
Rong Fu
,
Cenlin He
,
Joel R. Lisonbee
,
Justin S. Mankin
,
Richard Seager
,
Amanda Sheffield
,
Isla R. Simpson
, and
Eugene R. Wahl

Anthropogenically forced-warming and La Niña forced-precipitation deficits caused at least a sixfold risk increase for compound extreme low precipitation and high temperature in California–Nevada from October 2020 to September 2021.

Free access
Donald Murray
,
Andrew Hoell
,
Martin Hoerling
,
Judith Perlwitz
,
Xiao-Wei Quan
,
Dave Allured
,
Tao Zhang
,
Jon Eischeid
,
Catherine Smith
,
Joseph Barusgli
,
Jeff McWhirter
,
Chris Kreutzer
, and
Robert S. Webb
Full access
Chris Funk
,
Diego Pedreros
,
Sharon Nicholson
,
Andrew Hoell
,
Diriba Korecha
,
Gideon Galu
,
Guleid Artan
,
Zewdu Segele
,
Abebe Tadege
,
Zachary Atheru
,
Fetene Teshome
,
Kinfe Hailermariam
,
Laura Harrison
, and
Catherine Pomposi
Full access
Andrew Hoell
,
Britt-Anne Parker
,
Michael Downey
,
Natalie Umphlett
,
Kelsey Jencso
,
F. Adnan Akyuz
,
Dannele Peck
,
Trevor Hadwen
,
Brian Fuchs
,
Doug Kluck
,
Laura Edwards
,
Judith Perlwitz
,
Jon Eischeid
,
Veva Deheza
,
Roger Pulwarty
, and
Kathryn Bevington

Abstract

The 2017 flash drought arrived without early warning and devastated the U.S. northern Great Plains region comprising Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota and the adjacent Canadian Prairies. The drought led to agricultural production losses exceeding $2.6 billion in the United States, widespread wildfires, poor air quality, damaged ecosystems, and degraded mental health. These effects motivated a multiagency collaboration among academic, tribal, state, and federal partners to evaluate drought early warning systems, coordination efforts, communication, and management practices with the goal of improving resilience and response to future droughts. This essay provides an overview on the causes, predictability, and historical context of the drought, the impacts of the drought, opportunities for drought early warning, and an inventory of lessons learned. Key lessons learned include the following: 1) building partnerships during nondrought periods helps ensure that proper relationships are in place for a coordinated and effective drought response; 2) drought information providers must improve their understanding of the annual decision cycles of all relevant sectors, including, and beyond, direct impacts in agricultural sectors; and 3) ongoing monitoring of environmental conditions is vital to drought early warning, given that seasonal forecasts lack skill over the northern Great Plains.

Full access
Andrew Hoell
,
Britt-Anne Parker
,
Michael Downey
,
Natalie Umphlett
,
Kelsey Jencso
,
F. Adnan Akyuz
,
Dannele Peck
,
Trevor Hadwen
,
Brian Fuchs
,
Doug Kluck
,
Laura Edwards
,
Judith Perlwitz
,
Jon Eischeid
,
Veva Deheza
,
Roger Pulwarty
, and
Kathryn Bevington
Full access