6 research outputs found
The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS)
During the period 1 September 1993 - 31 August 1994, further development of the Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) was conducted at the Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies (COLA) of the Institute of Global Environment and Society, Inc. (IGES) under subcontract 5555-31 from the University Space Research Association (USRA) administered by The Center of Excellence in Space Data and Information Sciences (CESDIS). This final report documents progress made under this subcontract and provides directions on how to access the software and documentation developed therein. A short description of GrADS is provided followed by summary of progress completed and a summary of the distribution of the software to date and the establishment of research collaborations
The North American Multi-Model Ensemble (NMME): Phase-1 Seasonal to Interannual Prediction, Phase-2 Toward Developing Intra-Seasonal Prediction
The recent US National Academies report "Assessment of Intraseasonal to Interannual Climate Prediction and Predictability" was unequivocal in recommending the need for the development of a North American Multi-Model Ensemble (NMME) operational predictive capability. Indeed, this effort is required to meet the specific tailored regional prediction and decision support needs of a large community of climate information users. The multi-model ensemble approach has proven extremely effective at quantifying prediction uncertainty due to uncertainty in model formulation, and has proven to produce better prediction quality (on average) then any single model ensemble. This multi-model approach is the basis for several international collaborative prediction research efforts, an operational European system and there are numerous examples of how this multi-model ensemble approach yields superior forecasts compared to any single model. Based on two NOAA Climate Test Bed (CTB) NMME workshops (February 18, and April 8, 2011) a collaborative and coordinated implementation strategy for a NMME prediction system has been developed and is currently delivering real-time seasonal-to-interannual predictions on the NOAA Climate Prediction Center (CPC) operational schedule. The hindcast and real-time prediction data is readily available (e.g., http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu/SOURCES/.Models/.NMME/) and in graphical format from CPC (http://origin.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/people/wd51yf/NMME/index.html). Moreover, the NMME forecast are already currently being used as guidance for operational forecasters. This paper describes the new NMME effort, presents an overview of the multi-model forecast quality, and the complementary skill associated with individual models
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Seasonal forecasts of tropical cyclone activity in a high-atmospheric-resolution coupled prediction system
Seasonal forecast skill of the basinwide and regional tropical cyclone (TC) activity in an experimental
coupled prediction system based on the ECMWF System 4 is assessed. As part of a collaboration between the
Center for Ocean–Land–Atmosphere Studies (COLA) and the ECMWF called Project Minerva, the system
is integrated at the atmospheric horizontal spectral resolutions of T319, T639, and T1279. Seven-month
hindcasts starting from 1 May for the years 1980–2011 are produced at all three resolutions with at least 15
ensemble members. The Minerva system demonstrates statistically significant skill for retrospective forecasts
of TC frequency and accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) in the North Atlantic (NA), eastern North Pacific
(EP), and western North Pacific. While the highest scores overall are achieved in the North Pacific, the skill in
the NA appears to be limited by an overly strong influence of the tropical Pacific variability. Higher model
resolution improves skill scores for the ACE and, to a lesser extent, the TC frequency, even though the
influence of large-scale climate variations on these TC activity measures is largely independent of resolution
changes. The biggest gain occurs in transition from T319 to T639. Significant skill in regional TC forecasts is
achieved over broad areas of the Northern Hemisphere. The highest-resolution hindcasts exhibit additional
locations with skill in the NA and EP, including land-adjacent areas. The feasibility of regional intensity
forecasts is assessed. In the presence of the coupled model biases, the benefits of high resolution for seasonal
TC forecasting may be underestimated