1 Introduction
Sudden stratospheric warmings are dramatic manifestations of dynamical variability in the polar vortices that form each winter in both hemispheres . They are known to lead to equatorward shifts of the tropospheric eddy-driven jets that can persist for several months and to increase the likelihood and severity of a variety of high-impact extreme events . Capturing these surface impacts is thus of growing concern for operational centers interested in improving their extended range forecasts on subseasonal to seasonal timescales.
A number of recent studies have explored the role of major or minor stratospheric warmings in the Subseasonal-to-Seasonal Prediction (S2S) database or in individual models . These studies confirm that operational models can to some extent capture the surface impacts of such stratospheric variability and have demonstrated regionally enhanced skill at subseasonal timescales in the weeks following stratospheric warmings. However, studies based on existing databases of subseasonal forecasts are hampered by the diversity of forecast initialization dates and ensemble generation strategies, limited availability of detailed model output, and the varying ability of operational models to capture the stratospheric variability itself. Moreover, such studies must ultimately rely on correlative analyses, making causal inferences difficult to assess. Single-model studies have been extremely valuable in providing a more detailed understanding but cannot be as robust as a controlled, multi-model intercomparison. There is a clear need at this point to more carefully evaluate and compare the relevant coupling mechanisms across operational models in order to fully exploit this important source of skill on timescales of weeks to months.
The purpose of this paper is to propose and describe a common protocol for numerical experiments to isolate and evaluate the representation of stratospheric influence on near-surface weather in subseasonal to seasonal forecast models. The intent is that by outlining and motivating a single protocol that can be adopted by multiple operational centers, such efforts can be directly compared, increasing their collective value.
The protocol presented here is primarily based on a zonally symmetric nudging technique that has been used successfully to identify stratospheric influences on the tropospheric circulation in both hemispheres . In essence, by comparing an ensemble hindcast in which the stratosphere is constrained to the observed evolution to a second hindcast in which the stratospheric circulation is constrained to climatology, the tropospheric impacts of the stratospheric anomalies can be isolated. Moreover, the protocol will request a more complete set of output than is typically available from existing databases of subseasonal forecasts. The requested variables are relevant to understanding both the coupling processes and the surface impacts themselves. The experiments described here will thus represent a significant step forward from the previous intercomparisons of operational forecasts by both allowing deeper investigations into the relevant coupling processes and removing the confounding influence of differences in stratospheric forecast skill.
Although the zonally symmetric nudging is related to other nudging approaches , in this case stratospheric circulation anomalies are imposed through a linear relaxation term that acts only on the zonally symmetric component of the stratospheric circulation. The purpose of this technique is to permit eddies to vary in a dynamically consistent way across the tropopause. This is particularly relevant for the planetary waves that play a central role coupling the stratosphere and troposphere. This approach has been shown to theoretically and practically avoid any significant artifacts. The latter work has also shown that much of the surface response to sudden stratospheric warmings is obtained by nudging the zonal-mean state alone. Nonetheless, it is possible that there are aspects of the surface response that are related to zonal asymmetries in the stratosphere, and experiments in which the full stratospheric state is nudged are also described and requested at a secondary priority level. This choice is further discussed below.
While the protocol as outlined is intended to be applicable to any stratospheric event of interest, we suggest that it be initially applied to three specific recent events: the boreal sudden warmings that occurred in February 2018 and January 2019 and the austral sudden warming that occurred in September 2019. Each of these was followed by surface extremes that studies have suggested arise in part because of the stratospheric event.
This project is coordinated by the Stratospheric Network for the Assessment of Predictability (SNAP) working group that is a joint activity of the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) Stratosphere-troposphere Processes and their Role in Climate (SPARC) project and of the Subseasonal-to-Seasonal Prediction (S2S) project that is supported by both the WCRP and the World Weather Research Programme (WWRP).
This paper describes the overall experimental design as well as details of the nudging approach. Data produced by this project will be made available to the community through the Centre for Environmental Data Analysis (CEDA), with the aim of providing researchers with a resource to investigate the dynamics of stratosphere-troposphere coupling. While not a central goal of the experiments, the case studies span periods with several distinct phases of the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) and the occurrence of several large-amplitude Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO) events. As such, these experiments are expected to be valuable to several other SPARC and S2S projects, including the S2S MJO and Teleconnections group, the QBO initiative (QBOi), and Stratospheric And Tropospheric Influences On Tropical Convective Systems (SATIO-TCS).
The paper is outlined as follows. Section 2 describes four specific goals that the proposed experiments are intended to achieve. Section 3 describes in detail the general experimental protocol that can be applied to study any stratospheric event of interest and specifies details of the nudging, including the reference states towards which the nudged experiments are relaxed. The trade-offs of different nudging approaches are also discussed further. In Sect. 4 the three target events of interest are described in further detail. Section 5 lays out the model output requested from the forecasts, and Sect. 6 includes a list of participating models and a brief concluding outlook.
2 Overview and motivations
The basic experimental design proposes to focus on the evolution of specific events of interest, using the following sets of forecast ensembles.
A standard forecast ensemble in which the atmosphere evolves freely after initialization. The method of initialization and of generating ensemble members is not specified and can be determined by the participating modeling groups.
A nudged ensemble in which the zonally symmetric stratospheric state is nudged globally to the observed time evolution of the stratospheric event of interest.
A nudged control ensemble in which the zonally symmetric stratospheric state is nudged globally to a time-evolving climatological state.
As discussed in Sect. 1, the free ensembles and the zonally symmetric nudged and control ensembles are of the highest priority. However, zonally symmetric nudging can be difficult to implement in models with grids that are not aligned along fixed latitudes. Thus two additional ensembles are requested at lower priority.
A nudged ensemble in which the full stratospheric state (including zonally asymmetric components) is nudged globally to the observed time evolution of the stratospheric event of interest.
A nudged control ensemble in which the full stratospheric state (including zonally asymmetric components) is nudged globally to a time-evolving climatological state.
The reference states for the nudged and control ensembles are computed from ERA5 reanalysis output on native model levels. These coincide with isobaric surfaces at the stratospheric levels where the nudging is applied. Details of how the climatological state is computed are given in the Methods section below.
The protocol targets forecast integrations of 45 d and an ensemble size of 50 to 100 members. For each of the three case studies, two specific initialization dates for each type of integration are proposed; these are discussed in the context of the specific target events described in Sect. 3.
The impact of the stratosphere on the troposphere can be confounded by unrelated dynamical variability within the troposphere. Hence, the choice to emphasize ensemble size over the number of initialization dates is intended to allow for statistically and dynamically meaningful comparisons of these specific events across participating models.
There are four central motivations for the proposed forecast experiments, presented in the following subsections. In addition, these experiments are expected to provide useful insights into coupling between the tropical stratosphere and troposphere. These secondary motivations are discussed following the four primary goals.
2.1 Quantify stratospheric contributions to surface predictability
Through nudging the stratosphere to observations, the nudged ensemble will provide a “perfect” forecast of the stratosphere's zonal-mean state. The forecast skill attained can be compared to that attained by the control ensemble (amounting to a “climatological” stratospheric forecast) and the free ensemble to quantify the contribution of a successful forecast of the stratosphere. These experiments will provide a multi-model assessment of the potential increase in skill associated with an improved representation of the stratospheric state and an up to date assessment of the present skill that is achieved by each model.
Many authors have noted that the surface response seen in the composite average following sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) is not seen in every individual event. An important question here is whether this inter-event diversity is predictable to some extent on S2S timescales. For instance, if the equatorward shift of the North Atlantic jet following SSW depends on the state of the MJO, this modulation of the response may be predictable in advance. As a second example, a recent study by suggests that the North Pacific response following SSW depends strongly on the nature of SST anomalies at the onset of the stratospheric event. This suite of experiments will allow a case-by-case assessment of S2S predictability arising from the stratospheric state by including multiple case studies of interest.
2.2 Attribute extreme events to stratospheric variability
The proposed protocol will also provide a means of assessing or formally attributing the contribution of the stratosphere to an extreme event of interest . Extremes that have been associated with sudden warmings in recent years include cold air outbreaks in the Northern Hemisphere and hot, dry extremes over Australia . This goal is closely related to the growing sub-discipline that focuses on attributing the occurrence of particular extremes to climate change and variability .
Consider some extreme event that is thought to have been associated with a specific SSW, for instance the cold air outbreak (CAO) that occurred in Europe following the sudden warming in February 2018. The probability of such an event occurring might be estimated from the observed climatological frequency of similar events, from a set of forecasts that sufficiently represent the variability of the climate system from a given subseasonal forecast model, or a combination of both . Given the nudged ensemble, one can then estimate the probability of a similar event occurring given the weakened state of the stratospheric polar vortex . The relative risk
As an example, Fig. shows monthly mean indices of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)
Figure 1
Monthly mean NAO indices from a set of nudged integrations similar to those described in this protocol. The zonally symmetric component of the stratosphere in the control (CTRL) run is nudged to the model climatology, while those of SSWs and SSWd are nudged, respectively, to the evolution of a vortex split and a vortex displacement event simulated by a free-running configuration of the same model. (Figure 12a from , © American Meteorological Society. Used with permission.)
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
The interpretation of the relative risk becomes more challenging in a forecast context, since the probability of an extreme event is strongly conditional on the initial conditions known at the time of the forecast. As the forecast initialization date grows closer to the event of interest, the forecast ensembles will begin to forecast the event with increasing fidelity; that is, the probability of occurrence conditional on initial conditions days prior to an event, , will grow.
One practical way to frame this question is to ask whether improving the forecast of the stratospheric state can lead to earlier accurate forecasts of the event in question. Alternately, one may ask whether degrading the forecast of the stratosphere leads to degraded forecasts of the event. Both framings are enabled by the proposed experiments.
Figure 2
Forecast and observed monthly averaged temperature anomalies over land for March 2018 over Europe. Forecasts are from NCEP CFSv2, averaged over a total of 40 ensemble members, 4 of which are initialized on each date in the range of initial dates given in the captions. Observations are from the NCEP/NCAR reanalysis.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
Figure provides an example from NCEP CFSv2 monthly forecasts of March 2018 temperatures over Europe for different initialization dates. A sudden stratospheric warming occurred on 12 February 2018. The forecast model did not predict the SSW with any certainty until the initializations in the 1–10 February period. There is a significant change in the March surface temperatures over Europe for initializations before and after the stratospheric event was captured in the prediction system, with forecasts initialized with the SSW information more closely capturing the observed March temperatures. But do these differences arise solely because the forecast model finally captured the SSW or because the lead time had decreased? With the three experiments proposed and applying this to multiple initializations before the event, it would be clear whether or not having the “perfect” stratosphere (nudged or nudged-full ensemble) for runs initialized in mid-January would have given more accurate forecasts at longer leads.
A very similar approach has been adopted by who made the distinction between “probabilistic” and “deterministic” forecasts of the extreme event in question. They presented evidence from the ECMWF model that a perfect forecast of the stratospheric anomalies in early 2018 would increase the predicted odds of extreme cold weather over Europe from 5 % to 45 %. These odds then increase further as forecasts are made closer to the event.
The common and comparable set of integrations from a range of operational centers made available by this project will allow this finding to be extended to other extreme events and will allow further development of this methodology. We aim to have a large enough ensemble size to allow for the direct study of well-constrained extreme events, but if necessary we may also supplement the model data with extreme value statistics
Imposing stratospheric anomalies through a nudging procedure has been shown to significantly impact the near surface flow
2.4 Quantify the role of the stratosphere in upward wave propagation
The onset of a sudden stratospheric warming is marked by the reversal of the climatologically westerly zonal-mean zonal winds in the mid-stratosphere. Operational forecasts can, on average, successfully forecast this reversal starting about 2 weeks prior, but this depends strongly on the specifics of the event in question . A key issue is the successful forecasting of the rapid growth in planetary-scale Rossby waves that drives the breakdown of the stratospheric polar vortex. This requires capturing both tropospheric precursors for these waves
A fourth goal for this protocol is to determine how well forecast systems capture this initial amplification of planetary waves. In particular, the first of the initialization dates has been chosen just prior to the periods of enhanced wave driving that led to the breakdown of the stratospheric polar vortex (as discussed in Sect. 4 below). By comparing the evolution of the wave field in the control and nudged ensembles, the role of the stratospheric state in determining the wave amplification can be isolated and compared with the importance of capturing specific tropospheric precursors. This will reveal how well forecast models can predict the evolution of the planetary waves on a given zonally symmetric background, allowing for quantitative intercomparison. Further comparison with the free ensemble will provide detailed insight into the ability of individual models to forecast the complex interactions responsible for the amplification of the wave field.
2.5 Secondary science questions
Although the emphasis in the design of the Stratospheric Nudging And Predictable Surface Impacts (SNAPSI) project has been on extratropical coupling between the stratosphere and troposphere, the experiments are expected to provide further insights into coupling between the tropical stratosphere and troposphere and between the tropics and extratropics in both the troposphere and stratosphere. We outline in this section several potential questions that may be addressed with these experiments.
2.5.1 Representation of the quasi-biennial oscillation
These experiments may be useful for examining the model representation of the QBO. Since the QBO is a nonlinear oscillation driven by wave–mean flow interactions, the waves and the mean flow are tightly coupled: the waves influence the evolution of the mean flow and vice versa. In the nudged ensemble, upward-propagating equatorial waves that force the QBO (both resolved and parameterized) will encounter essentially identical zonal-mean zonal wind profiles in all models. This allows wave forcing to be directly compared between models absent the complication of differing background zonal-mean winds. This approach has been used previously to assess the response of wave forcing to changing vertical resolution in a single model . In the free experiment, equatorial winds can respond to the wave forcing. To the extent that model biases have time to develop over the 45 d hindcast period, results from the nudged ensemble may yield insight into the origin of biases in the free runs. In particular, current QBO-resolving models are typically unable to maintain realistic QBO amplitude in the lowermost tropical stratosphere , and some S2S models lose nearly the entire QBO signal within a typical 40 d reforecast .
2.5.2 Stratospheric influences on tropical convection
Recent work has highlighted a variety of potential stratospheric impacts on organized tropical convection . Notably, the phase of the QBO has been shown to have a significant impact on the strength and persistence of the MJO . This impact has an apparent effect on the predictive skill of the MJO, in that forecasts of the MJO remain skillful at longer lead times during the easterly phase of the QBO . Sudden stratospheric warmings have also been shown to shift and enhance regions of tropical convection . A wide range of coupling pathways and mechanisms have been proposed, but fundamental understanding remains limited, in part due to the large scale separation between the planetary scales of the stratospheric variability and the mesoscale to synoptic scale of tropical convection .
Imposing stratospheric variability through nudging as is proposed here can isolate the importance of the stratospheric state on convection in the forecast models. Nudging techniques similar to those adopted by SNAPSI have been used to study both tropical and extratropical pathways in single-model contexts; SNAPSI will allow for a multi-model investigation of these effects.
2.5.3 Stratospheric pathways for teleconnections
The stratosphere is thought to modulate the remote impacts of a variety of climate drivers, spanning from shorter timescale blocking events and seasonal snow cover anomalies to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and sources of decadal variability such as the solar cycle
3 Methodology
3.1 Reference states
The reference states have been prepared from the ERA5 reanalysis . The zonally symmetric reference states used for the nudged and control ensembles are the instantaneous zonal-mean temperature and zonal wind output from ERA5 at the native 137 model levels at 6 h intervals, interpolated to a 1 horizontal grid. No relaxation is imposed on the meridional (or vertical) winds in these two ensembles. For the full ensembles which require zonally varying information, the zonal and meridional wind fields are provided along with the temperatures, again on a 1 horizontal grid at the native vertical resolution of ERA5.
The climatological state for the control ensemble is computed based on the 40-year period from 00:00 UTC 1 July 1979 to 18:00 UTC 30 June 2019. Leap years are handled by using the 365 consecutive days following 1 July, omitting 30 June; thus, 29 February is treated as 1 March for leap years. Thus, any discontinuities from the end points of the climatology or from omitting leap days are introduced between 30 June and 1 July, outside forecast periods of interest. The climatological state is then further smoothed in time by a 121-point (30 d) triangular filter to reduce residual high-frequency features from the limited sampling of the climatological state. A further modification to the reference state for the control ensemble is discussed in the next section.
3.2 Nudging specification and reference states
“Nudging” specific components of the atmospheric circulation by means of an artificially imposed relaxation to a given state has been used by many studies as a means of testing dynamical hypotheses. However, the introduction of an artificial linear relaxation into the equations of motion can produce unintended consequences
This section describes in detail the nature of the nudging relaxation to be used in this protocol, which is designed to avoid such consequences. The intent for the nudged and control ensembles is to prescribe the zonally symmetric component of the stratospheric flow without indirectly constraining the troposphere or affecting the planetary waves that play a central role in the coupling between the two. The nudging is specified as a relaxation tendency of the form , where is either the zonal-mean temperature or zonal wind, and is the zonally symmetric reference state to which the flow is constrained. The nudging tendency is imposed equally on all longitudes (at a given latitude and height) to avoid directly affecting the wave field. The timescale of the nudging varies with pressure, tapering gradually from infinite (i.e., no nudging) below a lower limit of hPa, to full strength at hPa, following a cubic profile . At full strength the nudging timescale is 6 h. The nudging is to be imposed at all latitudes equally.
The choice of levels to nudge was made to constrain as much of the stratosphere as was feasible without directly impacting the troposphere. The impacts of imposing nudging at different levels has been considered in detail in a simpler model context by , who found that the surface impacts were stronger when the lower stratosphere was better constrained. The lower stratosphere has also been shown to be particularly relevant for understanding the impacts of SSWs in the context of more comprehensive models and observations
While the nudging profile is specified in pressure coordinates, the intent is for the nudging strength to be constant on model levels and can be converted using “typical” pressures appropriate for the details of the vertical coordinate system of a given model.
For the nudged-full and control-full ensembles, the same nudging profile is applied to the horizontal winds and temperature.
For the control ensemble, the protocol specifies nudging the zonally symmetric components of the stratosphere towards the climatology. Since the initial conditions are in a few cases some ways away from the climatology, nudging at full strength to the climatology will generate undesirable transients as the stratosphere adjusts towards the climatological state.
In order to reduce this initial shock, the reference state for the control ensemble is interpolated smoothly from the observed evolution to the climatology over the first 5 d of the forecast period. For instance, the temperature is relaxed towards a state defined by
1 where is the instantaneous reference state, is the reference climatology computed as described in the previous section, is the time, is the starting time of the forecast, and is an interpolating function given by 2 with d. A similar adjustment should be adopted for the control-full ensemble.
Figure 3
Evolution of zonal-mean and in several regions indicated in the captions for free, nudged, and control forecast ensembles produced by the CESM2 model. Forecasts are initialized at 12 February 2018; the forecast ensembles consist of 50 members. The thick lines indicate the ensemble mean, and the thin lines indicate the ensemble spread (1 standard deviation). Solid black lines show ERA5 output.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
Figure demonstrates the effects of zonally symmetric nudging in forecast ensembles generated by the CESM2 model (see below for model references). In the mid-stratosphere (Fig. a), the nudging successfully constrains the zonal-mean zonal wind in the nudged ensemble to follow the rapid deceleration of the winds in reference state, capturing several fluctuations of the wind following the initial reversal that were not captured by the free forecast. Residual differences between the nudged forecast and the ERA5 reference state arise from issues of vertical interpolation. In contrast, the control run exhibits a gradual weakening of the climatological westerlies after an initial period during which the reference state is transitioning to the climatology. Both nudged and control exhibit much weaker ensemble spread. The nudging also constrains the zonal-mean state in the lower stratosphere, well below the nudging region (Fig. b). Again the nudged ensemble captures the gradual warming at these levels better than the free ensemble does, and the spread in both nudged and control is substantially smaller than in the free forecast. Finally, the nudging is also able to improve the zonal-mean zonal winds in the tropical lower stratosphere (Fig. c).
Figure 4
Ensemble mean (contour lines) and spread (shading) of (a–c) zonal-mean zonal wind and (d–f) meridional heat flux in CESM2 forecasts initialized at 12 February 2018, averaged over forecast days 10 to 40. The contour interval for the zonal wind is 10 m s, and for the meridional heat flux it is 5 K m s. The forecast ensemble in (a) and (d) is free running, while those in (b) and (e) and (c) and (f) correspond to the nudged and control integrations. The horizontal lines indicate the lower (dashed) and upper (solid) bounds of the nudging transition region; above the latter the nudging is imposed at full strength.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
Figure quantifies the effects of the nudging on the zonal-mean winds and meridional heat fluxes in free, nudged, and control ensemble forecasts from the CESM2 model. Figure a–c show the ensemble mean (contour lines) and spread (filled contours) in the zonal-mean zonal wind, averaged over forecast days 10 through 40. Despite being averaged over a month following the event, the Arctic polar vortex is much weaker in the free and nudged runs than in the control ensemble. The ensemble spread in nudged and control is much reduced within the nudging region relative to that of the free ensemble, as intended.
The nudging specification in the nudged and control runs is, by contrast, not intended to directly impact the zonally asymmetric component of the flow. The statistics of the planetary waves in particular are found to be comparable to the free running case (Fig. d–f), though the ensemble spread increases with overall magnitude of the meridional heat flux in the control run given the stronger vortex on which the waves can propagate. One exception is that wave amplitudes in the upper stratosphere can grow larger in the presence of nudging; this is in part because the nudging prevents the wave transience from decelerating the mean flow, allowing planetary waves to propagate higher before they encounter critical levels. In some cases this can result in unusually strong winds in the upper stratosphere and lower mesosphere; however, this is not expected to influence the evolution of the lower stratosphere or its interactions with the troposphere.
Because the wave field is not directly controlled by the nudging, the zonal-mean forcing produced by the internally generated wave field can differ substantially from what would be consistent with the evolution of the reference state, particularly for the control ensemble. Since the meridional circulation is largely determined by the forcing associated with the waves
The presence of a nudging layer can also give rise to a “sponge-layer feedback” style response , which is characterized by spurious zonal-mean temperature and wind anomalies generated just below the layer of nudging in response to tropospheric torques that differ from the reference state. These effects have also been shown to be negligible on these timescales .
3.3 Zonally symmetric versus full-field nudgingThis protocol emphasizes the use of a zonally symmetric nudging approach, although additional ensembles with full-field nudging are also requested at a secondary priority level. This section discusses some of the primary merits and drawbacks to each approach and provides justification for this prioritization.
There are two primary arguments for full-field nudging: one scientific and one practical. First, there may be some important role for stratospheric asymmetries in determining the tropospheric response to SSWs, and thus the full-field nudging may represent an upper-bound of improved forecast skill arising from a perfect stratospheric forecast. Second, implementing zonally symmetric nudging is technically difficult and computationally expensive in models operating on a grid that is not aligned with the parallels; full-field nudging may thus make it easier for more models to carry out the protocol.
There are also two primary arguments for zonally symmetric nudging. First, by leaving the wave field to evolve freely, the experiments will allow us to investigate the impact of stratospheric mean-state biases on the forecast of the planetary wave field. Second, it is important that we have a deeper theoretical understanding of the consequences of zonal-mean nudging.
Past work
It is not clear, however, that full-field nudging will really provide an upper bound on the downward impacts of the stratosphere. Nudging of any kind in the presence of strong balance constraints implies that there will be unintended, remote consequences of including an artificial forcing. For instance, nudging the asymmetric component of the stratosphere will introduce an effective and highly artificial reflecting layer for any large-scale Rossby waves that are not consistent between the model forecast and the nudged reference state. The induced zonal asymmetries in the stratosphere may also act as an effective stratospheric source of waves. These may produce unintended biases in the surface flow; these effects have not been quantified. In contrast, the dynamical artifacts associated with zonally symmetric nudging are better understood .
In summary, there are strong arguments for carrying out both symmetric and full-field nudging forecasts. Both are thus included in the protocol, and we expect that enough modeling centers will carry out both in order to carry out some meaningful comparisons between the two approaches. On balance, however, the additional science questions that can be addressed with the symmetric nudging approach were considered worth prioritizing.
4 Case studies
The ensemble forecasts just described will be applied to three recent events: the major sudden stratospheric warmings of 2018 and 2019 in the Northern Hemisphere and the near-major warming of 2019 in the Southern Hemisphere. This section reviews the evolution of these three events, highlighting the evolution of the stratospheric polar vortex and the response of the tropospheric Northern Annular Mode and Southern Annular Mode (NAM and SAM, respectively), along with the closely related NAO and Arctic Oscillation (AO). Notable high-impact events that may be related to the stratospheric anomalies are also discussed. Finally, the state of other modes of climate variability are briefly summarized, including the QBO, ENSO, and MJO. These remote climate drivers are thought to be relevant both to the stratospheric evolution and potentially the surface impact; their state may thus be relevant for interpreting the surface impacts found in the forecast ensembles.
Two initialization dates are requested for each event (Table ). One date is chosen about 3 weeks prior to the surface extreme of interest in order to identify the contribution of the stratosphere to its forecast on subseasonal timescales (motivations 1, 2, and 3). A second date is chosen prior to the onset of the stratospheric warming in order to assess the representation of the onset of the event (motivations 1, 3, and 4). The former has higher priority than the latter, although they are listed chronologically in Table . Thursdays are chosen since nearly all models that contributed to the S2S database contributed forecasts initialized on Thursdays, making it easier to compare the two datasets. Further justification for the initialization dates selected are provided in the case-by-case discussion below.
Table 1
Case studies and forecast initialization dates. The nudged-full and control-full ensembles are requested only for the later of the two initialization dates for a given event.
Event (hemisphere) | Initialization dates | |
---|---|---|
12 February 2018 (NH) | 25 January 2018 | 8 February 2018 |
2 January 2019 (NH) | 13 December 2018 | 8 January 2019 |
18 September 2019 (SH) | 29 August 2019 | 1 October 2019 |
The Arctic polar vortex split in early February of 2018, leading to a reversal of the zonal-mean zonal wind at 60 N, 10 hPa on 12 February 2018. Prior to the event (Fig. ), the vortex was near its climatological strength; it weakened rapidly throughout the depth of the stratosphere, coincident with large-amplitude vertical fluxes of “wavenumber two” wave activity. Lower stratospheric anomalies persisted into late March 2018.
Figure 5
NAM indices during the February 2018 boreal major warming. The NAM indices are computed from ERA5 geopotential height anomalies following the methodology of . The vertical dashed–dotted black line indicates the date of the wind reversal at 10 hPa, 60 N. The vertical green and orange lines indicate the requested initialization dates.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
The tropospheric NAM responded strongly to these stratospheric anomalies, exhibiting a shift to negative values from mid-February through mid-March, consistent with the composite mean response to sudden stratospheric warmings. The NAO index was strongly negative in late February, coinciding with unusually cold weather over much of Europe and Asia during the last 2 weeks of February , bringing, for example, snow to Rome and several notable winter storms to the UK. Precipitation patterns also shifted, bringing persistent rain to the Iberian Peninsula, ending an extended period of drought .
Of the three proposed case studies, this first case has been the most actively studied to date. In a study of the S2S database, showed that those ensemble members that capture the amplitude of the lower stratospheric anomalies during this event (and the 2019 case considered next) were also more successful in forecasting the surface extremes; they also showed that this was more relevant than whether the model forecasted a split or displacement of the vortex. As discussed above, explicitly identified the increased risk of extreme cold over Europe arising from the stratospheric anomalies. This was also the case in the nudging experiments of , who examined the impacts of relaxing the stratospheric flow in seasonal forecasts initialized at the beginning of the winter season. The nudged ensemble reproduced a tropospheric response following the SSW in close agreement with observational composites.
The MJO reached near-record strength in phase 6 and 7 prior to the stratospheric wind reversal in February of 2018, i.e., the MJO phase which has been linked to enhanced SSW frequency and predictability for earlier events . A week after the event the MJO entered phase 8, which is linked to a negative NAO pattern. While do not find a correlation between forecast errors in the MJO and those in the NAM, do find that nudging the tropical evolution produces a negative NAO response in late February, suggesting that tropical circulation anomalies contributed to the anomalous European weather regimes.
The S2S prediction systems forecast the event about 11 d in advance , making this event less predictable than some other sudden warmings. Proximately, this is likely due to the nature of the relevant wave driving that amplified rapidly during the week prior to the stratospheric wind reversal (Fig. ). Subseasonal forecasts that captured this wave event were more successful in forecasting the vortex breakdown. The difficulty in forecasting the pulse of wave activity has in turn been tied to both anomalous blocking over Siberia and an episode of anticyclonic Rossby wave breaking in the North Atlantic .
Figure 6
Wave forcing during the February 2018 boreal major warming. Shading shows the vertical component of the Eliassen–Palm flux averaged from 50–70 N from zonal wavenumbers (a) one and (b) two. Contour lines show zonal-mean zonal wind at 60 N; the contour interval is 10 m s. The vertical dashed–dotted black line indicates the date of the wind reversal at 10 hPa, 60 N. The vertical green and orange lines indicate the requested initialization dates.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
On longer timescales, further suggest a role for the large-amplitude MJO event that preceded the stratospheric wind reversal, and suggest that several large snowfall events over Siberia in early and late January contributed to the wave driving responsible for the vortex breakdown. On seasonal timescales, the tropical Pacific was in a moderate La Niña state, and the QBO winds were persistently westerly at 50 hPa and easterly at 30 hPa throughout the winter. Thus the state of both ENSO and the QBO may have also contributed.
The first initialization date proposed is 25 January 2018, just prior to the first pulse of wave activity leading to the vortex split. The ensembles will thus produce some diversity in the tropospheric precursors outlined above. By considering the ensemble spread, the relative roles of tropospheric precursors and the stratospheric state in the amplification of the planetary waves can thus be isolated. These integrations may also capture some of the development of the European cold air outbreak in late February. The second date, 8 February 2018, is chosen to be closer to the development of the tropospheric extreme event after the full development of the stratospheric anomalies.
4.2 Boreal major warming of 2 January 2019In late December 2018, the Arctic vortex was displaced off of the pole prior to splitting. The 10 hPa winds reversed on 2 January 2019. In contrast to the 2018 event, the stratospheric vortex anomalies developed much more gradually through late December and early January during the 2018–2019 winter . The vortex remained split for several weeks. Anomalies in the lower stratosphere persisted nearly to March of 2019. The gradual weakening of the vortex was due to persistent “wavenumber one” forcing that was well predicted even from mid-December .
In strong contrast to the 2018 case, the tropospheric NAM did not respond strongly to the stratospheric anomalies, remaining near neutral or even slightly positive through much of the troposphere until early February (Fig. ). For instance, the 500 hPa NAM index averaged for 1 month after the 2018 event was , while following the 2019 case the value was 0.02. However, an extensive cold snap occurred over North America in late January (roughly 23–29 January) in a region vertically aligned with one of the daughter vortices generated by the split.
Figure 7
NAM indices during the January 2019 boreal major warming. The vertical dashed–dotted black line indicates the date of the wind reversal at 10 hPa, 60 N. The vertical green and orange lines indicate the requested initialization dates.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
This event was also considered by , who found that the surface temperatures and precipitation patterns 20 d following the onset date were generally not well forecast by the S2S models. Note, however, that they did not focus specifically on the cold air outbreak over North America. also performed nudging experiments to explore the impacts of the stratospheric anomalies on the surface. They found that the ensemble mean again reproduced the “canonical” tropospheric response, with an anomalously persistent negative AO pattern coinciding with NAM anomalies in the lower stratosphere, implying that the lack of tropospheric signal in observations was due to some competing effect(s). One possibility is that these competing effects arise from the tropics; the tropical nudging experiments of gave rise to North Atlantic mean sea level pressure anomalies that more closely resembled observations in January. For instance, the MJO also progressed through phase 6 and 7 in early January 2019 but at amplitudes considerably weaker than in 2018.
The S2S prediction systems forecast the stratospheric wind reversal more than 18 d prior to the central date in some cases but did not predict the vortex would split more than a few days in advance . The longer forecast horizon in this case seems to be related to the persistent wavenumber one forcing from mid-December 2018 that displaced the vortex off the pole prior to its ultimate splitting (see Fig. ).
Figure 8
Wave forcing during the January 2019 boreal major warming (quantities the same as Fig. ). The vertical dashed–dotted black line indicates the date of the wind reversal at 10 hPa, 60 N. The vertical green and orange lines indicate the requested initialization dates.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
propose a range of contributing factors for the wave amplification, including the state of ENSO, the QBO, the solar cycle, and the MJO. In the fall of 2018, the QBO at 50 hPa was strongly easterly below a westerly shear zone that stretched from 40 to 20 hPa. This shear zone descended through the winter. At the time of the wind reversal, the winds at 50 hPa were easterly and those at 30 hPa were westerly. Since the vertical wind shear in the 30–50 hPa layer was easterly in February 2018 and westerly in January 2019, these two start dates provide contrasting case studies of how model biases in wave forcing and QBO amplitude develop in the lower stratosphere for both easterly and westerly QBO phases.
The first suggested initialization date is 13 December 2018, just prior to the onset of the wavenumber one pulse, again motivated by the goal of producing some diversity in the tropospheric wave source in order to distinguish tropospheric and stratospheric contributions to the wave amplification. The second suggested initialization date is 8 January 2019, several weeks prior to the North American cold air outbreak.
4.3 Austral minor warming of September 2019The final event of interest is the minor warming that occurred in the Southern Hemisphere in September of 2019. Significant SAM anomalies began to emerge in the upper stratosphere towards the end of August (Fig. ). However, in contrast to the first two cases, the zonal-mean winds at 10 hPa, 60 S did not reverse. However, they did decelerate dramatically, reaching their minimum value on 18 September 2019, which can be considered the “central” date for the event (Fig. ). In late August the mid-stratospheric winds were near their climatological values, before a series of wavenumber one pulses of upward wave activity flux weakened the vortex from the stratopause downwards
Figure 9
SAM indices during the September 2019 austral minor warming. The SAM indices are computed from ERA5 geopotential height anomalies averaged over 65 to 90 S, analogously to the NAM indices shown in Figs. and . The vertical dashed–dotted black line indicates the date of minimum zonal-mean zonal wind at 10 hPa, 60 S. The vertical green and orange lines indicate the requested initialization dates.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
Figure 10
Wave forcing during the September 2019 austral minor warming. Shading shows the vertical component of the Eliassen Palm flux averaged from 50–70 S from zonal wavenumber (a) one and (b) two. Contour lines show zonal-mean zonal wind at 60 S. The vertical dashed–dotted black line indicates the date of minimum zonal-mean zonal wind at 10 hPa, 60 S. The vertical green and orange lines indicate the requested initialization dates.
[Figure omitted. See PDF]
The tropospheric SAM did not initially shift to negative values following the event. However, negative anomalies were observed in late October and November, during which conditions over Australia were hot and dry. Severe wildfires were widespread in November and unprecedented in December, potentially due in part to the stratospheric anomalies .
studied the effects of this event on tropical convection though a nudging experiment constraining the full stratospheric flow. They demonstrated that the stratospheric anomalies led to a systematic enhancement of convection in the Northern Hemisphere tropics, centered over Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific.
The event was forecast nearly 18 d prior by models with a reasonably resolved stratosphere , including the persistent stratospheric wavenumber one flux anomalies (Fig. ). A number of tropospheric precursors have been linked to this wave activity pulse, including a persistent blocking high over the Antarctic Peninsula and a region of anomalously low pressure over the Southern Indian Ocean . The first suggested initialization date is 29 August 2019, early in the development of the wave activity pulse responsible for the stratospheric event. The second suggested initialization date is 1 October 2019, after the stratospheric anomalies are established, 2 to 3 weeks prior to the onset of the tropospheric SAM response.
A major SSW occurred in the Southern Hemisphere in September of 2002 during which the polar vortex westerlies did fully reverse. The stratospheric anomalies during the 2019 event were in fact comparable to those observed in 2002, but the latter occurred slightly later in the spring when the climatological westerlies are weaker. We have chosen to focus on the 2019 case instead due to the recent focus on the latter event from an S2S perspective and because of the connection that has been drawn to the severe fires in Australia.
5 Data requestIn order to meet the scientific goals of this project, we request output from the forecast models that includes both surface quantities needed for identifying and quantifying high-impact surface extremes and dynamical quantities needed to diagnose the processes that couple the stratosphere and troposphere. Given the relatively short integration periods and small number of initialization dates, data are requested at relatively high temporal and vertical resolution to enable more detailed comparisons of the relevant processes than has been possible with existing subseasonal forecast databases. The data request is closely related to the DynVarMIP request , including a request for quantities required to close the zonally averaged zonal momentum and thermodynamic budgets.
Table 2
Variables in the 6hr data table. Surface (XYT) output averaged over 6 h intervals. See Sect. 5 for meaning of priority levels.
Name (priority) | Long name | Unit |
---|---|---|
pr (1) | Precipitation | kg m s |
prc (1) | Convective Precipitation | kg m s |
clt (2) | Total Cloud Cover Percentage | % |
hfds (2) | Downward Heat Flux at Sea Water Surface | W m |
tauu (2) | Surface Downward Eastward Wind Stress | Pa |
tauv (2) | Surface Downward Northward Wind Stress | Pa |
tasmax (2) | 6 hourly Maximum Near-Surface Air Temperature | K |
tasmin (2) | 6 hourly Minimum Near-Surface Air Temperature | K |
Maximum or minimum computed over preceding 6 h.
Table 3Variables in the 6hrZ data table. Zonal-mean output averaged over 6 h intervals (YPT). See Sect. 5 for meaning of priority levels. TEM stands for transformed Eulerian mean.
Name (priority) | Long name | Unit |
---|---|---|
tntnd (1) | Tendency of Air Temperature Due to Imposed Relaxation | K s |
utendnd (1) | Tendency of Eastward Wind Due to Imposed Relaxation | m s |
tntmp (2) | Tendency of Air Temperature Due to Model Physics | K s |
tntrl (2) | Tendency of Air Temperature Due to Longwave Radiative heating | K s |
tntrs (2) | Tendency of Air Temperature Due to Shortwave Radiative heating | K s |
utendepfd (2) | tendency of Eastward Wind Due to Eliassen–Palm Flux divergence | m s |
utendmp (2) | Tendency of Eastward Wind Due to Model Physics | m s |
utendnogw (2) | Eastward Acceleration Due to Non-Orographic Gravity Wave drag | m s |
utendogw (2) | Eastward Acceleration Due to Orographic Gravity Wave Drag | m s |
utendvtem (2) | Tendency of Eastward Wind Due to TEM Northward Advection and Coriolis Term | m s |
utendwtem (2) | Tendency of Eastward Wind Due to TEM Upward Advection | m s |
vtendnogw (2) | Northward Acceleration Due to Non-Orographic Gravity Wave Drag | m s |
vtendogw (2) | Northward Acceleration Due to Orographic Gravity Wave Drag | m s |
xgwdparam (2) | Eastward Gravity Wave Drag | Pa |
ygwdparam (2) | Northward Gravity Wave Drag | Pa |
These variables are not defined by the CMIP6 standard.
Quantities are requested on a horizontal grid at no finer resolution than and at a time resolution of 6 h. Atmospheric quantities that depend on a vertical coordinate are requested on the following slightly non-standard grid “snap34” of pressure levels: 1000, 925, 850, 700, 600, 500, 400, 300, 250, 200, 170, 150, 130, 115, 100, 90, 80, 70, 60, 50, 40, 30, 20, 15, 10, 7, 5, 3, 2, 1.5, 1, 0.7, 0.5, and 0.4 hPa. This includes some additional levels in the lower stratosphere relative to the CMIP6 “plev39” grid and fewer levels above the stratopause. Variable names follow CMIP6 standard naming conventions where possible. The requested variables are summarized in four data tables.
Surface quantities and fluxes averaged, maximized, or minimized over the 6 h preceding the time step (Table ).
Zonally averaged atmospheric quantities averaged over the 6 h preceding the time step (Table ). Includes quantities needed to close atmospheric momentum and thermodynamic budgets. These closely follow the DynVarMIP request but include the imposed tendencies from the nudging as well.
Instantaneous basic meteorological and surface quantities output every 6 h (Table ).
Instantaneous transformed Eulerian mean dynamical quantities output every 6 h, following the DynVarMIP request (Table ).
Variables in the 6hrPt data table. Instantaneous atmospheric (XYPT) and surface (XYT) quantities output at 6 h intervals. See Sect. 5 for meaning of priority levels. TOA stands for top of atmosphere.
Name | Long name | Unit |
---|---|---|
(Priority) | ||
ta (1) | Air Temperature | K |
ua (1) | Eastward Wind | m s |
va (1) | Northward Wind | m s |
wap (1) | Omega (vertical pressure velocity) | Pa s |
zg (1) | Geopotential Height | m |
hus (1) | Specific Humidity | kg kg |
ps (1) | Surface Air Pressure | Pa |
psl (1) | Sea Level Pressure | Pa |
tas (1) | Near-Surface Air Temperature | K |
uas (1) | Eastward Near-Surface Wind | m s |
vas (1) | Northward Near-Surface Wind | m s |
rlut (1) | TOA Outgoing Longwave Radiation | W m |
tos (2) | Sea Surface Temperature | C |
siconca (2) | Sea Ice Area Percentage | % |
sithick (2) | Sea Ice Thickness | m |
snd (2) | Snow Depth | m |
snw (2) | Surface Snow Amount | kg m |
mrso (2) | Total Soil Moisture Content | kg m |
mrsos (2) | Moisture in Upper Portion of Soil Column | kg m |
Variables in the 6hrPtZ data table. Zonal mean, instantaneous atmospheric (YPT) output at 6 h intervals. See Sect. 5 for meaning of priority levels.
Name (Priority) | Long name | Unit |
---|---|---|
epfy (2) | Northward Component of the Eliassen–Palm Flux | m s |
epfz (2) | Upward Component of the Eliassen–Palm Flux | m s |
o3 (2) | Mole Fraction of | mol mol |
vtem (2) | Transformed Eulerian Mean Northward Wind | m s |
wtem (2) | Transformed Eulerian Mean Upward Wind | m s |
Climatological if necessary.
There are two levels of priority for the requested variables. The higher priority variables (1) are considered necessary to meet the primary science goals and include meteorological quantities (winds, temperatures, specific humidity, and geopotential height) required to compute commonly used dynamical diagnostics, measures of precipitation, and surface quantities including pressure, temperature, and horizontal winds. Variables at the lower priority level (2) include zonally averaged quantities that would permit closing the zonally averaged momentum and thermodynamic budgets, as well as surface quantities that would permit a more detailed analysis of surface processes. The zonal-mean stratospheric ozone field is also requested at this lower priority level to allow for some assessment of the importance of ozone anomalies in forecasting the evolution of the polar vortex over subseasonal timescales.
6 Summary and outlookThe SNAPSI project aims to produce a set of controlled ensemble forecasts, initialized around several recent sudden stratospheric warmings. This dataset will allow for an unprecedentedly thorough, multi-model assessment of the contribution of stratospheric extreme events to surface predictability on subseasonal timescales. The proposed forecast ensembles include standard, free-running ensembles, in addition to “nudged” ensembles in which the evolution of the stratosphere is constrained either to the observed conditions or to climatological conditions. The use of zonally symmetric nudging will enable detailed investigations of the representation of planetary waves that play a central role in the evolution of the events.
Three case studies have been chosen to apply the experimental methodology: the major boreal sudden stratospheric warmings of February 2018 and January 2019 and the austral minor sudden stratospheric warming of September 2019. The atmosphere exhibited a range of tropospheric responses, but in each case an extreme event with significant societal impacts followed the stratospheric perturbation.
The experiments have been designed with four primary scientific motivations: (i) to assess the contribution of the stratosphere to subseasonal forecast skill as outlined above, (ii) to develop methods of formally attributing specific surface extremes to this stratospheric variability, (iii) to quantify mechanisms responsible for the surface impacts across the forecast models in detail, controlling for the magnitude and nature of the zonally symmetric stratospheric anomalies that are thought to be most directly responsible for the surface impacts, and (iv) to improve understanding of the upward coupling from the troposphere to the stratosphere. The experimental design, specific case studies, and forecast initialization dates have been chosen to meet these four goals.
Beyond these central goals, the experiments are further expected to shed light on a number of other aspects of dynamical coupling on subseasonal timescales between the stratosphere and troposphere and between the tropics and extratropics. Notably, both the 2018 and 2019 boreal sudden warming case studies span periods with significant MJO activity and differing phases of the QBO, and the 2019 austral sudden warming case spans the development phase of a disruption to the QBO that occurred in early 2020.
Table 6Participating centers, models, and reference publications.
Participating center | Model | Reference publication(s) |
---|---|---|
Beijing Climate Center (BCC), China Meteorological Administration | BCC-CSM2-HR | |
Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate of the National Council of Research of Italy (CNR-ISAC) | GLOBO | , |
Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) | GEM-NEMO | , |
Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) | CanESM5 | , |
European Centre for Mid-range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF) | IFS | |
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, NOAA (GFDL) | SPEAR | |
Korean Meteorological Administration (KMA) | GloSea5-GC2 | , , |
Météo-France | CNRM-CM 6.1 | |
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) | CESM2(CAM6) | , |
Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) | NAVGEM | , , |
United Kingdom Met Office (UKMO) | GloSea5 |
At the time of submission, 11 modeling groups from 10 modeling centers are participating in this project (Table ). Output from the contributing models will be stored in a central archive hosted by CEDA. Initial analysis of the output will be carried out by community working groups organized through the SNAP project. The output will be made available to the broader community. However, for an initial embargo period, to allow time for this analysis to be carried out and ensure modeling centers receive recognition for the time and resources that they have committed, anyone wishing to publish results based on this dataset will be asked to offer co-authorship to the SNAPSI leads and modeling center contacts.
Data availability
The reference states for all nudging runs are published and available online through CEDA (10.5285/540a4c4cdfa6497993bbfa7c3e3df51a, ).
Author contributions
The protocol was initially designed by PH, AB, ACP, TS, and CIG. JA, DM, and DIVD contributed to the text of the paper. The remaining authors contributed to the experimental design from the perspective of contributing operational centers and edited the manuscript.
Competing interests
The contact author has declared that neither they nor their co-authors have any competing interests.
Disclaimer
Publisher's note: Copernicus Publications remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Acknowledgements
We thank the Centre for Environmental Data Analysis for archiving the reference dataset and the forecasts that will be generated as part of this intercomparison effort.
Financial support
This research has been supported by the European Research Council starting grant under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant no. 677756 to Chaim I. Garfinkel) and the Swiss National Science Foundation through projects PP00P2_170523 and PP00P2_198896 (to Daniela I. V. Domeisen).
Review statement
This paper was edited by Juan Antonio Añel and reviewed by two anonymous referees.
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Abstract
Major disruptions of the winter season, high-latitude stratospheric polar vortices can result in stratospheric anomalies that persist for months. These sudden stratospheric warming events are recognized as an important potential source of forecast skill for surface climate on subseasonal to seasonal timescales. Realizing this skill in operational subseasonal forecast models remains a challenge, as models must capture both the evolution of the stratospheric polar vortices in addition to their coupling to the troposphere. The processes involved in this coupling remain a topic of open research.
We present here the Stratospheric Nudging And Predictable Surface Impacts (SNAPSI) project. SNAPSI is a new model intercomparison protocol designed to study the role of the Arctic and Antarctic stratospheric polar vortex disturbances for surface predictability in subseasonal to seasonal forecast models. Based on a set of controlled, subseasonal ensemble forecasts of three recent events, the protocol aims to address four main scientific goals. First, to quantify the impact of improved stratospheric forecasts on near-surface forecast skill. Second, to attribute specific extreme events to stratospheric variability. Third, to assess the mechanisms by which the stratosphere influences the troposphere in the forecast models. Fourth, to investigate the wave processes that lead to the stratospheric anomalies themselves. Although not a primary focus, the experiments are furthermore expected to shed light on coupling between the tropical stratosphere and troposphere. The output requested will allow for a more detailed, process-based community analysis than has been possible with existing databases of subseasonal forecasts.
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1 Dept. Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
2 NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, CO, USA
3 Department of Meteorology, University of Reading, Reading, UK
4 Fredy and Nadine Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
5 European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts, Reading, UK
6 Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Victoria, BC, Canada
7 School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
8 Institute of Earth Surface Dynamics, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
9 Beijing Climate Center, China Meteorological Administration, Beijing, China
10 CNR-ISAC, Bologna, Italy
11 Recherche en prévision numérique atmosphérique, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Dorval, QC, Canada
12 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, NOAA, Princeton, NJ, USA; University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, USA
13 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, NOAA, Princeton, NJ, USA
14 National Institute of Meteorological Sciences, Korea Meteorological Administration, Jeju, South Korea
15 School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea
16 Centre National de Recherches Météorologiques, Université de Toulouse, Météo-France, CNRS, Toulouse, France
17 Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, USA
18 Space Science Division, US Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA
19 Hadley Centre, Met Office, Exeter, UK
20 Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia