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Seasonal prediction of North American wintertime cold extremes in the GFDL SPEAR forecast system
by
Johnson, Nathaniel C.
, Jia, Liwei
, Delworth, Thomas L.
, Cooke, William
, Lu, Feiyu
, McHugh, Colleen
, Yang, Xiaosong
in
Anomalies
/ Canada
/ Climatology
/ Cold
/ Cold days
/ Cold weather
/ Components
/ Correlation
/ Dipoles
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Earth Sciences
/ Earth system science
/ El Nino
/ El Nino phenomena
/ El Nino-Southern Oscillation event
/ Extreme cold
/ Extreme weather
/ Fluid dynamics
/ fluid mechanics
/ Geophysical fluids
/ geophysics
/ Geophysics/Geodesy
/ Hydrodynamics
/ Oceanography
/ prediction
/ Predictions
/ Radiative forcing
/ Seasonal forecasting
/ snow
/ Southern Oscillation
/ Weather forecasting
/ Winter
2023
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Seasonal prediction of North American wintertime cold extremes in the GFDL SPEAR forecast system
by
Johnson, Nathaniel C.
, Jia, Liwei
, Delworth, Thomas L.
, Cooke, William
, Lu, Feiyu
, McHugh, Colleen
, Yang, Xiaosong
in
Anomalies
/ Canada
/ Climatology
/ Cold
/ Cold days
/ Cold weather
/ Components
/ Correlation
/ Dipoles
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Earth Sciences
/ Earth system science
/ El Nino
/ El Nino phenomena
/ El Nino-Southern Oscillation event
/ Extreme cold
/ Extreme weather
/ Fluid dynamics
/ fluid mechanics
/ Geophysical fluids
/ geophysics
/ Geophysics/Geodesy
/ Hydrodynamics
/ Oceanography
/ prediction
/ Predictions
/ Radiative forcing
/ Seasonal forecasting
/ snow
/ Southern Oscillation
/ Weather forecasting
/ Winter
2023
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Do you wish to request the book?
Seasonal prediction of North American wintertime cold extremes in the GFDL SPEAR forecast system
by
Johnson, Nathaniel C.
, Jia, Liwei
, Delworth, Thomas L.
, Cooke, William
, Lu, Feiyu
, McHugh, Colleen
, Yang, Xiaosong
in
Anomalies
/ Canada
/ Climatology
/ Cold
/ Cold days
/ Cold weather
/ Components
/ Correlation
/ Dipoles
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Earth Sciences
/ Earth system science
/ El Nino
/ El Nino phenomena
/ El Nino-Southern Oscillation event
/ Extreme cold
/ Extreme weather
/ Fluid dynamics
/ fluid mechanics
/ Geophysical fluids
/ geophysics
/ Geophysics/Geodesy
/ Hydrodynamics
/ Oceanography
/ prediction
/ Predictions
/ Radiative forcing
/ Seasonal forecasting
/ snow
/ Southern Oscillation
/ Weather forecasting
/ Winter
2023
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Seasonal prediction of North American wintertime cold extremes in the GFDL SPEAR forecast system
Journal Article
Seasonal prediction of North American wintertime cold extremes in the GFDL SPEAR forecast system
2023
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Overview
Skillful prediction of wintertime cold extremes on seasonal time scales is beneficial for multiple sectors. This study demonstrates that North American cold extremes, measured by the frequency of cold days in winter, are predictable several months in advance in the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory’s SPEAR (Seamless system for Prediction and EArth system Research) seasonal forecast system. Three predictable components of cold extremes over the North American continent are found to be skillfully predicted on seasonal scales. One is a trend-like component, which shows a continent-wide decrease in the frequency of cold extremes and is primarily attributable to external radiative forcing. This trend-like component is predictable at least 9 months ahead. The second predictable component displays a dipole structure over North America, with negative signs in the northwest and positive signs in the southeast. This dipole component is predictable with significant correlation skill for 2 months and is a response to the central Pacific ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation) as revealed from SPEAR AMIP-style simulations. The third component with the largest loadings over Canada and the northern US shows significant correlations with snow anomalies over mid-to-high latitudes of the North American continent. Predictions using only the three predictable components yield higher/comparable skill relative to the SPEAR raw forecasts.
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg,Springer,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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