1 / 22

The Uses of Marine Surface Data in Climate Research

The Uses of Marine Surface Data in Climate Research. David Parker, Hadley Centre, Met Office MARCDAT-2, Met Office, Exeter, October 17-20, 2005. Uses of marine surface data in climate research. Global climate monitoring Empirical studies of ocean-atmosphere interaction

glenv
Download Presentation

The Uses of Marine Surface Data in Climate Research

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Uses of Marine Surface Data in Climate Research David Parker, Hadley Centre, Met Office MARCDAT-2, Met Office, Exeter, October 17-20, 2005 .

  2. Uses of marine surface data in climate research • Global climate monitoring • Empirical studies of ocean-atmosphere interaction • Multivariate analyses of climatic variations • Forcing of atmospheric general circulation models: • Climate change detection/attribution • Validation or improvement of land surface air temperatures • Boundary and near-surface conditions for atmospheric and oceanic models and reanalyses • Validation of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models • Initial conditions for seasonal to decadal prediction

  3. Global climate monitoring: IPCC

  4. Global climate monitoring: IPCC Zonal-average SST anomalies (°C) (relative to 1961-90) in the Atlantic (top), Indian (middle) and Pacific (bottom) Oceans, 1900-2004. Annual anomalies are smoothed 1:3:4:3:1 to show multi-annual variations

  5. Global climate monitoring: Climatological Summaries Scheme From Elanor Gowland: POSTER

  6. Empirical studies of ocean-atmosphere interaction E Tropical Pacific SST (left) and SST gradients (right) from (top to bottom) AVHRR, Reynolds OI, Real-Time Global SST analysis, and AMSR. From Chelton and Wentz (BAMS August 2005)

  7. Multivariate analyses of climate variations: coverage of HadSLP data in 5° cells 1851-60, 1861-70, 1911-20, 1941-50, 1971-80, 1991-2000. From Allen & Ansell (2005)

  8. Multivariate analyses of climatic variations Mean sea level pressure during UK heatwaves. From Ansell et al., 2005

  9. Multivariate analyses of climatic variations El Nino 1877-8 SST MSLP U V Precip Sea level Alexey Kaplan

  10. Multivariate analyses of climatic variations Significant wave heights versus atmospheric circulation. From Vika Grigorieva and Sergey Gulev

  11. Multivariate analyses of climatic variations • Vasily Smolyanitsky (sea ice)

  12. Forcing of atmospheric GCMs: Climate change detection/attribution • Forcing an atmospheric GCM with historical SSTs: • Ensures that interannual variability is well represented, so comparisons with vs. without external forcings are more likely to be able to detect their signals. • BUT the historical SSTs already largely subsume the effects of these forcings, so detection/attribution is only possible over land and interpretation may be ambiguous; AND atmospheric forcing of the ocean cannot be represented. • SO “Pacemaker” partly-coupled atmosphere-ocean experiments are being planned, specifying SST only in key areas where the ocean forces the atmosphere.

  13. Forcing of atmospheric GCMs: Validation and improvement of land surface air temperatures From Folland (International J. Climatology, 2005)

  14. Boundary and near-surface conditions for atmospheric and oceanic models and reanalyses • ECMWF plans 70-year atmospheric reanalysis back to 1940s: Adrian Simmons. Needs include good metadata (e.g., type of wind observation; anemometer heights) and excellent SST and sea ice concentration and, ideally, ice thickness. • NOAA/CDC plans surface-data-based atmospheric reanalysis back to 1900 or before: Gil Compo

  15. Influence of high-resolution SST on atmospheric analyses From Chelton and Wentz (BAMS August 2005)

  16. Validation of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models Summary of fluxes: global annual means Ian Culverwell & Helene Banks (POSTER)

  17. Validation of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models Top: Annual cycles of standard deviation of Niño 3 SST. Bottom: Power spectra of Niño SST anomalies. HadISST (solid), HadCM3 (dots), HadCEM (dash) and HadGEM1 (dash-dot). From Johns et al. (submitted to J. Climate 2005)

  18. Validation of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models Seasonal cycles of sea-ice area (Alison McLaren et al: POSTER)

  19. Validation of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models Mean cyclone strength anomaly (hPa), December-February, from ERA40 (top left), HadAM3 (top right), HadGEM1 (bottom left) and HadGAM1 (bottom right). From Ringer et al. (submitted to J. Climate 2005).

  20. Validation of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models North Atlantic Oscillation, defined as EOF1 of MSLP over the North Atlantic region, in HadCM3 (top), HadGEM1 (middle) and observations (GMSLP - bottom). Time series show the principal component for 140 years of model simulation or for 1871-1998 for observations. From Ringer et al. (submitted to J. Climate 2005).

  21. Initial conditions for seasonal to decadal prediction Control (solid with dotted 5% and 95% error-bars) and test (dashed) anomaly correlations of hindcast (up to 10 seasons) global (top) and Niño 3 (bottom) annually averaged 1.5m surface air temperatures. The test includes altimeter data in its initialisation of ocean currents and therefore sets out with a better balance than the control. Stephen Cusack et al: POSTER

  22. Conclusions • The range of uses of marine surface data in climate research is expanding • Marine (and all other) data records need to be of climate-quality, following the GCOS Climate Monitoring Principles.

More Related