Flow dependence of wintertime subseasonal prediction skill over Europe

Issuing skillful forecasts beyond the typical horizon of weather predictability remains a challenge actively addressed by the scientific community. This study evaluates winter subseasonal reforecasts delivered by the CNRM and ECMWF dynamical systems and identifies that the level of skill for predict...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ardilouze, Constantin, Specq, Damien, Batté, Lauriane, Cassou, Christophe
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-2021-32
https://wcd.copernicus.org/preprints/wcd-2021-32/
Description
Summary:Issuing skillful forecasts beyond the typical horizon of weather predictability remains a challenge actively addressed by the scientific community. This study evaluates winter subseasonal reforecasts delivered by the CNRM and ECMWF dynamical systems and identifies that the level of skill for predicting temperature in Europe varies fairly consistently in both systems. In particular, forecasts initialized during positive North-Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) phases tend to be more skillful over Europe at week 3 in both systems. Composite analyses performed in an atmospheric reanalysis, a long-term climate simulation and both forecast systems unveil very similar temperature and sea-level pressure patterns three weeks after NAO conditions. Furthermore, regressing these fields onto the 3-week prior NAO index in a reanalysis shows consistent patterns over Europe but also other regions of the northern hemisphere extratropics, thereby suggesting a lagged teleconnection, either related to the persistence or recurrence of the postive and negative phases of the NAO. This teleconnection, conditionned to the intensity of the initial NAO phase, is well captured by forecast systems. As a result, it is a key mechanism for determining a priori confidence in the skill of wintertime subseasonal forecasts over Europe as well as others parts of the northern hemisphere.