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  • Author or Editor: Hai Lin x
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Ayrton Zadra
,
Keith Williams
,
Ariane Frassoni
,
Michel Rixen
,
Ángel F. Adames
,
Judith Berner
,
François Bouyssel
,
Barbara Casati
,
Hannah Christensen
,
Michael B. Ek
,
Greg Flato
,
Yi Huang
,
Falko Judt
,
Hai Lin
,
Eric Maloney
,
William Merryfield
,
Annelize Van Niekerk
,
Thomas Rackow
,
Kazuo Saito
,
Nils Wedi
, and
Priyanka Yadav
Full access
Cristiana Stan
,
Cheng Zheng
,
Edmund Kar-Man Chang
,
Daniela I. V. Domeisen
,
Chaim I. Garfinkel
,
Andrea M. Jenney
,
Hyemi Kim
,
Young-Kwon Lim
,
Hai Lin
,
Andrew Robertson
,
Chen Schwartz
,
Frederic Vitart
,
Jiabao Wang
, and
Priyanka Yadav

Abstract

This study evaluates the ability of state-of-the-art subseasonal-to-seasonal (S2S) forecasting systems to represent and predict the teleconnections of the Madden–Julian oscillation and their effects on weather in terms of midlatitude weather patterns and North Atlantic tropical cyclones. This evaluation of forecast systems applies novel diagnostics developed to track teleconnections along their preferred pathways in the troposphere and stratosphere, and to measure the global and regional responses induced by teleconnections across both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Results of this study will help the modeling community understand to what extent the potential to predict the weather on S2S time scales is achieved by the current generation of forecasting systems, while informing where to focus further development efforts. The findings of this study will also provide impact modelers and decision-makers with a better understanding of the potential of S2S predictions related to MJO teleconnections.

Full access
Kathy Pegion
,
Ben P. Kirtman
,
Emily Becker
,
Dan C. Collins
,
Emerson LaJoie
,
Robert Burgman
,
Ray Bell
,
Timothy DelSole
,
Dughong Min
,
Yuejian Zhu
,
Wei Li
,
Eric Sinsky
,
Hong Guan
,
Jon Gottschalck
,
E. Joseph Metzger
,
Neil P Barton
,
Deepthi Achuthavarier
,
Jelena Marshak
,
Randal D. Koster
,
Hai Lin
,
Normand Gagnon
,
Michael Bell
,
Michael K. Tippett
,
Andrew W. Robertson
,
Shan Sun
,
Stanley G. Benjamin
,
Benjamin W. Green
,
Rainer Bleck
, and
Hyemi Kim

Abstract

The Subseasonal Experiment (SubX) is a multimodel subseasonal prediction experiment designed around operational requirements with the goal of improving subseasonal forecasts. Seven global models have produced 17 years of retrospective (re)forecasts and more than a year of weekly real-time forecasts. The reforecasts and forecasts are archived at the Data Library of the International Research Institute for Climate and Society, Columbia University, providing a comprehensive database for research on subseasonal to seasonal predictability and predictions. The SubX models show skill for temperature and precipitation 3 weeks ahead of time in specific regions. The SubX multimodel ensemble mean is more skillful than any individual model overall. Skill in simulating the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) and the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), two sources of subseasonal predictability, is also evaluated, with skillful predictions of the MJO 4 weeks in advance and of the NAO 2 weeks in advance. SubX is also able to make useful contributions to operational forecast guidance at the Climate Prediction Center. Additionally, SubX provides information on the potential for extreme precipitation associated with tropical cyclones, which can help emergency management and aid organizations to plan for disasters.

Free access