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91探花
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Dr Scott Osprey FRMetS

Senior NCAS Research Scientist

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Climate dynamics
  • Predictability of weather and climate
Scott.Osprey@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)82434,01865 (2)72923
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 111
  • About
  • Publications

Supplementary material to "Revisiting the surface impacts of the QBO in the Large Ensemble Single Forcing MIP simulations: are teleconnections still too weak?"

(2026)

Authors:

Chaim I Garfinkel, David Avisar, Scott M Osprey, Doug Smith, Jian Rao, Jonathon S Wright

Relative roles of different tropical oceans on the weakening of the stratospheric equatorial quasi-biennial oscillation

npj Climate and Atmospheric Science Springer Nature (2026)

Authors:

Yue Wang, Jian Rao, Chaim I Garfinkel, Rongcai Ren, Scott M Osprey, Yixiong Lu

Abstract:

The Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO) is the dominant mode of tropical stratospheric variability that modulates global circulation and climate. Although a long-term weakening of QBO amplitude has been observed under global warming, the relative roles of different tropical oceans remain unclear. We perform sensitivity experiments forced by sea surface temperature perturbations over the tropical Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans, as well as their combined warming, to separate individual and joint effects. Pacific warming produces the strongest weakening and slowest descent of the QBO, whereas Atlantic warming slightly strengthens the amplitude and extends the vertical structure. Indian Ocean warming slightly weakens the amplitude and accelerates the descent. When all three oceans warm simultaneously, the QBO exhibits a weaker amplitude and faster descent, consistent in sign with the combined single-basin responses but with a reduced magnitude owing to diminished zonal and inter-basin SST gradients. Momentum budget analyses further show that basin-dependent competition between equatorial wave forcing and tropical upwelling underlies these contrasting responses.

QBOi El Ni帽o Southern Oscillation experiments: assessing relationships between ENSO, MJO, and QBO

Weather and Climate Dynamics Copernicus Publications 7:1 (2026) 317-339

Authors:

Dillon Elsbury, Federico Serva, Julie M Caron, Seung-Yoon Back, Clara Orbe, Jadwiga H Richter, James A Anstey, Neal Butchart, Chih-Chieh Chen, Javier Garc铆a-Serrano, Anne Glanville, Yoshio Kawatani, Tobias Kerzenmacher, Francois Lott, Hiroaki Naoe, Scott Osprey, Froila M Palmeiro, Seok-Woo Son, Masakazu Taguchi, Stefan Versick, Shingo Watanabe, Kohei Yoshida

Abstract:

Abstract. This study uses an ensemble of climate model experiments coordinated by the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation initiative (QBOi) to analyze the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) in the presence of either perpetual El Ni帽o or La Ni帽a sea surface temperatures during boreal winter. In addition to the prescribed El Ni帽o Southern Oscillation (ENSO) conditions, the nine models internally generate QBOs, meaning each may influence the MJO. Objectives of our analyses are to assess the response of the MJO to strong idealized ENSO forcing and look for evidence of a QBO influence on the MJO in a multi-model context. The diagnostics used include wavenumber-frequency spectra of tropical convective and dynamical fields, measures of MJO lifetime, an evaluation of MJO diversity and visualization of MJO vertical structure, as well as an assessment of QBO morphology and the QBO's impact on tropical convection. Kelvin wave spectral power increases in the El Ni帽o simulations whereas equatorial Rossby waves power is stronger in the La Ni帽a simulations. All models simulate faster MJO propagation under El Ni帽o conditions. This change in speed is corroborated by the MJO diversity analysis, which reveals that models better reproduce the observed 鈥渇ast propagating鈥 and 鈥渟tanding鈥 MJO archetypes given perpetual El Ni帽o and La Ni帽a, respectively. Regardless of ENSO, QBO descent into the lower stratosphere is underestimated and we detect little QBO influence on tropical tropopause stability and MJO activity. With little influence from the QBO on the MJO activity in these runs, we can be confident that the aforementioned changes in the MJO indeed arise from the different ENSO boundary conditions.

On complex network techniques for atmospheric flow analysis: a polar vortex case study

Journal of Physics: Complexity IOP Publishing (2025)

Authors:

Mar铆a Reboredo Prado, Renaud Lambiotte, Irene Moroz, Scott Osprey

Abstract:

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Atmospheric flow underpins virtually all meteorological and climatological phenomena, yet extracting meaningful features from its dynamics remains a major scientific challenge due to its high dimensionality, multi-scale behaviour, and inherent nonlinearity. In this study, we investigate the potential of a network-based framework to reveal the relationships between distinct flow structures. Specifically, we apply three techniques, independent of any particular phenomenon or model, to explore patterns of coherence and information transfer, vortical interactions, and Lagrangian coherent structures. We assess their utility using a rotating shallow-water model of the stratospheric polar vortex, which reproduces key aspects of wintertime dynamics, including sudden stratospheric warming split events. Our results 91探花 three central claims. First, the transformation of fluid flow data into a network representation preserves essential dynamical information. Second, this representation enables a more accessible and structured analysis of the underlying dynamical structures. Third, multiple types of networks can be constructed from atmospheric flow data, each offering distinct yet complementary insights into the system鈥檚 collective behaviour. Together, these findings highlight the potential of network-based approaches as valuable tools in atmospheric research.</jats:p>

QBOi El Ni帽o鈥揝outhern Oscillation experiments: teleconnections of the QBO

Weather and Climate Dynamics Copernicus Publications 6:4 (2025) 1419-1442

Authors:

Hiroaki Naoe, Jorge L Garc铆a-Franco, Chang-Hyun Park, Mario Rodrigo, Froila M Palmeiro, Federico Serva, Masakazu Taguchi, Kohei Yoshida, James A Anstey, Javier Garc铆a-Serrano, Seok-Woo Son, Yoshio Kawatani, Neal Butchart, Kevin Hamilton, Chih-Chieh Chen, Anne Glanville, Tobias Kerzenmacher, Fran莽ois Lott, Clara Orbe, Scott Osprey, Mijeong Park, Jadwiga H Richter, Stefan Versick, Shingo Watanabe

Abstract:

Abstract. This study investigates Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO) teleconnections and their modulation by the El Ni帽o鈥揝outhern Oscillation (ENSO) using a multi-model ensemble from the Atmospheric Processes And their Role in Climate (APARC) QBO initiative (QBOi). Analyzing observed QBO鈥揈NSO teleconnections is challenging because it is difficult to separate the respective influences of QBO and ENSO outside the QBO region due to aliasing in the historical record. To isolate these signals, simulations were conducted with annually repeating prescribed sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) representing idealized El Ni帽o and La Ni帽a conditions (the QBOi EN and LN experiments, respectively), and results are compared with the QBOi control experiment (CTL) under ENSO-neutral conditions. The strength of the Holton-Tan relationship between the phase of the QBO and the strength of the polar vortex seen in observations is reproduced in fewer than three models in CTL and by one model in EN. In LN, three out of nine models reproduce the observed Holton鈥揟an relationship, but with less than half of the observed amplitude. In the Arctic winter climate, sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs) occur more frequently in EN than in LN; however, unlike in observations, there is no discernible difference in SSW frequency between QBO westerly (QBO-W) and QBO easterly (QBO-E) phases. The Asia-Pacific subtropical jet (APJ) shifts significantly equatorward during QBO-W compared to QBO-E in observations, but this shift is not robust across models, regardless of ENSO phases. In the tropics, the sign and spatial pattern of the QBO precipitation response vary widely across models and experiments, indicating that any potential QBO signal is strongly modulated by the prevailing ENSO phases. Overall, the QBOi models exhibit unrealistically weak QBO wind amplitudes in the lower stratosphere, which may explain the weak polar vortex and APJ responses, as well as the weak precipitation signals in the tropics. In contrast, the QBO teleconnection with the Walker circulation during boreal summer and autumn shows consistent signals in both observations and most models. Specifically, the QBO-W phase is characterized by upper-level westerly and lower-level easterly anomalies over the Indian Ocean鈥揗aritime Continent relative to QBO-E, although the amplitude and timing of these anomalies remain model-dependent. Notably, the influence of QBO phase on the Walker circulation appears insensitive to the ENSO phase.

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