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Review: the predictability of the extra-tropical stratosphere on monthly timescales and its impact on the skill of tropospheric forecasts

Authors :
Tripathi, Om P.
Baldwin, Mark
Charlton-Perez, Andrew
Charron, Martin
Eckermann, Stephen D.
Gerber, Edwin
Harrison, R. Giles
Jackson, David R.
Kim, Baek-Min
Kuroda, Yuhji
Lang, Andrea
Mahmood, Sana
Mizuta, Ryo
Roff, Greg
Sigmond, Michael
Son, Seok-Woo
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Royal Meteorological Society, 2015.

Abstract

Extreme variability of the winter- and spring-time stratospheric polar vortex has been shown to affect\ud extratropical tropospheric weather. Therefore, reducing stratospheric forecast error may be one way to improve\ud the skill of tropospheric weather forecasts. In this review, the basis for this idea is examined. A range of studies of different stratospheric extreme vortex events shows that they can be skilfully forecasted beyond five days and into the sub-seasonal range (0-30 days) in some cases. Separate studies show that typical errors in forecasting a stratospheric extreme vortex event can alter tropospheric forecasts skill by 5-7% in the extratropics on sub-seasonal timescales. Thus understanding what limits stratospheric predictability is of significant interest to\ud operational forecasting centres. Both limitations in forecasting tropospheric planetary waves and stratospheric\ud model biases have been shown to be important in this context.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1477870X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....14f296ca547d4a2a4c244e383d901c4d