4.7 Article

How Do Stratospheric Perturbations Influence North American Weather Regime Predictions?

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 35, Issue 18, Pages 5915-5932

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0413.1

Keywords

Climate classification; regimes; North America; Stratosphere; Stratosphere-troposphere coupling; Subseasonal variability; Winter; cool season

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) via the SCENARIO Doctoral Training Partnership at the University of Reading [NE/L002566/1]
  2. National Centre for Atmospheric Science, a NERC collaborative centre

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This study investigates the impact of forecast error and uncertainty in the polar vortex on predictions of large-scale weather patterns called regimes over North America. The results provide a framework for interpreting the stratospheric influence on North American regime behavior and can be used to improve weather forecast models.
Observational evidence shows changes to North American weather regime occurrence depending on the strength of the lower-stratospheric polar vortex. However, it is not yet clear how this occurs or to what extent an improved stratospheric forecast would change regime predictions. Here we analyze four North American regimes at 500 hPa, constructed in principal component (PC) space. We consider both the location of the regimes in PC space and the linear regression between each PC and the lower-stratospheric zonal-mean winds, yielding a theory of which regime transitions are likely to occur due to changes in the lower stratosphere. Using a set of OpenIFS simulations, we then test the effect of relaxing the polar stratosphere to ERA-Interim on subseasonal regime predictions. The model start dates are selected based on particularly poor subseasonal regime predictions in the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts CY43R3 hindcasts. While the results show only a modest improvement to the number of accurate regime predictions, there is a substantial reduction in Euclidean distance error in PC space. The average movement of the forecasts within PC space is found to be consistent with expectation for moderate-to-large lower-stratospheric zonal wind perturbations. Overall, our results provide a framework for interpreting the stratospheric influence on North American regime behavior. The results can be applied to subseasonal forecasts to understand how stratospheric uncertainty may affect regime predictions, and to diagnose which regime forecast errors are likely to be related to stratospheric errors. Significance StatementPredicting the weather several weeks ahead is a major challenge with large potential benefits to society. The strength of the circulation more than 10 km above the Arctic during winter (i.e., the polar vortex) is one source of predictability. This study investigates how forecast error and uncertainty in the polar vortex can impact predictions of large-scale weather patterns called regimes over North America. Through statistical analysis of observations and experiments with a weather forecast model, we develop an understanding of which regime changes are more likely to be due to changes in the polar vortex. The results will help forecasters and researchers understand the contribution of the stratosphere to changes in weather patterns, and in assessing and improving weather forecast models.

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