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91探花
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Dr Antje Weisheimer (she)

Principal NCAS Research Fellow

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Predictability of weather and climate
Antje.Weisheimer@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)82441
Robert Hooke Building, room S37
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Warming Stripes for 91探花 from 1814-2019

Warming Stripes for 91探花 from 1814-2019.

Calibrating large-ensemble European climate projections using observational data

Earth System Dynamics 11:4 (2020) 1033-1049

Authors:

Ch O鈥橰eilly, Dj Befort, A Weisheimer

Abstract:

© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under This study examines methods of calibrating projections of future regional climate for the next 40–50 years using large single-model ensembles (the Community Earth System Model (CESM) Large Ensemble and Max Planck Institute (MPI) Grand Ensemble), applied over Europe. The three calibration methods tested here are more commonly used for initialised forecasts from weeks up to seasonal timescales. The calibration techniques are applied to ensemble climate projections, fitting seasonal ensemble data to observations over a reference period (1920–2016). The calibration methods were tested and verified using an “imperfect model” approach using the historical/representative concentration pathway 8.5 (RCP8.5) simulations from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5 (CMIP5) archive. All the calibration methods exhibit a similar performance, generally improving the out-of-sample projections in comparison to the uncalibrated (bias-corrected) ensemble. The calibration methods give results that are largely indistinguishable from one another, so the simplest of these methods, namely homogeneous Gaussian regression (HGR), is used for the subsequent analysis. As an extension to the HGR calibration method it is applied to dynamically decomposed data, in which the underlying data are separated into dynamical and residual components (HGR-decomp). Based on the verification results obtained using the imperfect model approach, the HGR-decomp method is found to produce more reliable and accurate projections than the uncalibrated ensemble for future climate over Europe. The calibrated projections for temperature demonstrate a particular improvement, whereas the projections for changes in precipitation generally remain fairly unreliable. When the two large ensembles are calibrated using observational data, the climate projections for Europe are far more consistent between the two ensembles, with both projecting a reduction in warming but a general increase in the uncertainty of the projected changes.

A Century in Hindcast: Building a Suitable Test for Seasonal Forecasts

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society American Meteorological Society 101:11 (2020) 995-998

Authors:

Antje Weisheimer, Daniel J Befort, Dave MacLeod, Tim Palmer, Chris O鈥橰eilly, Kristian Str酶mmen

Constraining projections using decadal predictions

Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union 47:18 (2020) e2020GL087900

Authors:

Daniel J Befort, Christopher O'Reilly, Antje Weisheimer

Abstract:

There is increasing demand for robust, reliable and actionable climate information for the next 1 to 50 years. This is challenging for the scientific community as the longest initialized predictions are limited to 10 years (decadal predictions). Thus, to provide seamless information for the upcoming 50 years, information from decadal predictions and uninitialized projections need to be merged. In this study, the ability to obtain valuable climate information beyond decadal time-scales by constraining uninitialized projections using decadal predictions is assessed. The application of this framework to surface temperatures over the North Atlantic Subpolar Gyre region, shows that the constrained uninitialized sub-ensemble has higher skill compared to the overall projection ensemble also beyond ten years when information from decadal predictions is no longer available. Though showing the potential of such a constraining approach to obtain climate information for the near-term future, its utility depends on the added value of initialization.

Assessing the robustness of multidecadal variability in Northern Hemisphere wintertime seasonal forecast skill

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 146:733 (2020) qj.3890

Authors:

Christopher H O'Reilly, Antje Weisheimer, David MacLeod, Daniel J Befort, Tim Palmer

Abstract:

Recent studies have found evidence of multidecadal variability in northern hemisphere wintertime seasonal forecast skill. Here we assess the robustness of this finding by extending the analysis to analysing a diverse set of ensemble atmospheric model simulations. These simulations differ in either numerical model or type of initialisation and include atmospheric model experiments initialised with reanalysis data and free鈥恟unning atmospheric model ensembles. All ensembles are forced with observed SST and seaice boundary conditions. Analysis of large鈥恠cale Northern Hemisphere circulation indicesover the Northern Hemisphere (namely the North Atlantic Oscillation, Pacific North American pattern and the Arctic Oscillation) reveals that in all ensembles there is larger correlation skill in the late century periods than during periods in the mid鈥恈entury. Similar multidecadal variability in skill is found in a measure of total skill integrated over the whole of the extratropics. Most of the differences in large鈥恠cale circulation skill between the skillful late period (as well as early period) and the less skillful mid鈥恈entury period seem to be due to a reduction in skill over the North Pacific and a disappearance in skill over North America and the North Atlantic. The results are robust across different models and different types of initialisation, indicating that the multidecadal variability in Northern Hemisphere winter skill is a robust feature of 20th century climate variability. Multidecadal variability in skill therefore arises from the evolution of the observed SSTs, likely related to a weakened influence of ENSO on the predictable extratropical circulation signal during the middle of the 20th century, and is evident in the signal鈥恡o鈥恘oise ratio of the different ensembles, particularly the larger ensembles.

Beyond skill scores: exploring sub鈥恠easonal forecast value through a case鈥恠tudy of French month鈥恆head energy prediction

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 146:733 (2020) 3623-3637

Authors:

Joshua Dorrington, Isla Finney, Tim Palmer, Antje Weisheimer

Abstract:

We quantify the value of sub鈥恠easonal forecasts for a real鈥恮orld prediction problem: the forecasting of French month鈥恆head energy demand. Using surface temperature as a predictor, we construct a trading strategy and assess the financial value of using meteorological forecasts, based on actual energy demand and price data. We show that forecasts with lead times greater than two鈥墂eeks can have value for this application, both on their own and in conjunction with shorter鈥恟ange forecasts, especially during boreal winter. We consider a cost/loss framework based on this example, and show that, while it captures the performance of the short鈥恟ange forecasts well, it misses the marginal value present in medium鈥恟ange forecasts. We also contrast our assessment of forecast value to that given by traditional skill scores, which we show could be misleading if used in isolation. We emphasise the importance of basing assessment of forecast skill on variables actually used by end鈥恥sers.

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