4.7 Review

MJO Simulation Diagnostics

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 22, Issue 11, Pages 3006-3030

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/2008JCLI2731.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. CLIVAR and International CLIVAR
  2. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science
  3. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
  4. NSF Climate and Large-Scale Dynamics Program [ATM-063234]
  5. NOAA CPPA Award [NA05OAR4310006]
  6. NSF [ATM0739402]
  7. NOAA Office of Global Programs through the Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies (CIMAS)
  8. Korea Meteorological Administration Research and Development Program [CATER_ 2006-4206]
  9. BK21 program
  10. Natural Environment Research Council [ncas10009] Funding Source: researchfish

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The Madden-Julian oscillation (MJO) interacts with and influences a wide range of weather and climate phenomena (e. g., monsoons, ENSO, tropical storms, midlatitude weather), and represents an important, and as yet unexploited, source of predictability at the subseasonal time scale. Despite the important role of the MJO in climate and weather systems, current global circulation models (GCMs) exhibit considerable shortcomings in representing this phenomenon. These shortcomings have been documented in a number of multimodel comparison studies over the last decade. However, diagnosis of model performance has been challenging, and model progress has been difficult to track, because of the lack of a coherent and standardized set of MJO diagnostics. One of the chief objectives of the U. S. Climate Variability and Predictability (CLIVAR) MJO Working Group is the development of observation-based diagnostics for objectively evaluating global model simulations of the MJO in a consistent framework. Motivation for this activity is reviewed, and the intent and justification for a set of diagnostics is provided, along with specification for their calculation, and illustrations of their application. The diagnostics range from relatively simple analyses of variance and correlation to more sophisticated space-time spectral and empirical orthogonal function analyses. These diagnostic techniques are used to detect MJO signals, to construct composite life cycles, to identify associations of MJO activity with the mean state, and to describe interannual variability of the MJO.

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