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contributor authorAthanasiadis, Panos J.;Bellucci, Alessio;Scaife, Adam A.;Hermanson, Leon;Materia, Stefano;Sanna, Antonella;Borrelli, Andrea;MacLachlan, Craig;Gualdi, Silvio
date accessioned2018-01-03T11:00:13Z
date available2018-01-03T11:00:13Z
date copyright11/18/2016 12:00:00 AM
date issued2016
identifier otherjcli-d-16-0153.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4245909
description abstractAbstractSignificant predictive skill for the mean winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and Arctic Oscillation (AO) has been recently reported for a number of different seasonal forecasting systems. These findings are important in exploring the predictability of the natural system, but they are also important from a socioeconomic point of view, since the ability to predict the wintertime atmospheric circulation anomalies over the North Atlantic well ahead in time will have significant benefits for North American and European countries.In contrast to the tropics, for the mid latitudes the predictive skill of many forecasting systems at the seasonal time scale has been shown to be low to moderate. The recent findings are promising in this regard, suggesting that better forecasts are possible, provided that key components of the climate system are initialized realistically and the coupled models are able to simulate adequately the dominant processes and teleconnections associated with low-frequency variability. It is shown that a multisystem approach has unprecedented high predictive skill for the NAO and AO, probably largely due to increasing the ensemble size and partly due to increasing model diversity.Predicting successfully the winter mean NAO does not ensure that the respective climate anomalies are also well predicted. The NAO has a strong impact on Europe and North America, yet it only explains part of the interannual and low-frequency variability over these areas. Here it is shown with a number of different diagnostics that the high predictive skill for the NAO/AO indeed translates to more accurate predictions of temperature, surface pressure, and precipitation in the areas of influence of this teleconnection.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleA Multisystem View of Wintertime NAO Seasonal Predictions
typeJournal Paper
journal volume30
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0153.1
journal fristpage1461
journal lastpage1475
treeJournal of Climate:;2016:;volume( 030 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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