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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.

Factors Influencing the Seasonal Predictability of Northern Hemisphere Severe Winter Storms

Geophysical Research Letters (2019)

Authors:

F Hansen, T Kruschke, RJ Greatbatch, A Weisheimer

Abstract:

漏2018. The Authors. We investigate the role of the tropics, the stratosphere, and atmosphere-ocean coupling for seasonal forecasts of strong, potentially damaging, Northern Hemisphere extratropical winter wind storm frequencies. This is done by means of relaxation experiments with the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts model, which allow us to prescribe perfect forecasts for specific parts of the coupled atmosphere-ocean system. We find that perfect predictions of the Northern Hemisphere stratosphere significantly enhance winter storm predictive skill between eastern Greenland and Northern Europe. Correct seasonal predictions of the occurrence of stratospheric sudden warmings play a decisive role. The importance of correctly predicting the tropics and of two-way atmosphere-ocean coupling, both for forecasting stratospheric sudden warming risk and, correspondingly, severe winter storm frequency, is noted.

Seasonal forecast skill for extra鈥恡ropical cyclones and windstorms

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 145:718 (2018) 92-104

Authors:

Daniel J Befort, S Wild, Knight, JF Lockwood, HE Thornton, L Hermanson, PE Bett, Antje Weisheimer, GC Leckebusch

Abstract:

Extra鈥恡ropical cyclones and their associated extreme wind speeds are a major cause of vast damage and large insured losses in several European countries. Reliable seasonal predictions of severe extra鈥恡ropical winter cyclones and associated windstorms would thus have great social and economic benefits, especially in the insurance sector. We analyse the climatological representation and assess the seasonal prediction skill of wintertime extra鈥恡ropical cyclones and windstorms in three multi鈥恗ember seasonal prediction systems: ECMWF鈥怱ystem3, ECMWF鈥怱ystem4 and Met Office鈥怗loSea5, based on hindcasts over a 20 year period (1992鈥2011). Small to moderate positive skill in forecasting the winter frequency of extra鈥恡ropical cyclones and windstorms is found over most of the Northern Hemisphere. The skill is highest for extra鈥恡ropical cyclones at the downstream end of the Pacific storm track and for windstorms at the downstream end of the Atlantic storm track. We also assess the forecast skill of windstorm frequency by using the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) as the predictor. Prediction skill improves when using this technique over parts of the British Isles and North Sea in GloSea5 and ECMWF鈥怱4, but reduces over central western Europe. This suggests that using the NAO is a simple and effective method for predicting wind storm frequency, but that increased forecast skill can be achieved in some regions by identifying windstorms directly using an objective tracking algorithm. Consequently, in addition to the large鈥恠cale influence of the NAO, other factors may contribute to the predictability of wind storm frequency seen in existing forecast suites, across impact relevant regions of Europe. Overall, this study reveals for the first time significant skill in forecasting the winter frequency of high鈥恑mpact windstorms ahead of the season in regions that are vulnerable to such events.

How confident are predictability estimates of the winter North Atlantic Oscillation?

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley (2018) qj.3446

Authors:

Antje Weisheimer, Damien Decremer, David MacLeod, Christopher O鈥橰eilly, TN Stockdale, S Johnson, TN Palmer

Ensemble sensitivity analysis of Greenland blocking in medium鈥恟ange forecasts

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 144:716 (2018) 2358-2379

Authors:

Teresa Parker, Tim Woollings, Antje Weisheimer

Abstract:

The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is the leading mode of variability in the large scale circulation over the North Atlantic in winter, and strongly influences the weather and climate of Europe. On synoptic timescales, the negative phase of the NAO often corresponds to the occurrence of a blocking episode over Greenland. Hence, the dynamics and predictability of these blocking events is of interest for the prediction of the NAO and its related impacts over a wide region. Ensemble sensitivity analysis utilises the information contained in probabilistic forecast ensembles to calculate a statistical relationship between a forecast metric and some precursor condition. Here the method is applied to 15鈥恉ay forecasts of a set of 26 Greenland blocking events using the state鈥恛f鈥恡he鈥恆rt European Centre for Medium鈥怰ange Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) forecasting system. The ensemble sensitivity analysis shows that Greenland blocking does not develop in isolation in these forecasts, but instead the blocking is sensitive to remote precursors, such as 500 hPa and 50 hPa geopotential height, particularly in the low鈥恌requency flow. In general, there are more significant sensitivities to anomalies in the tropics than in the polar regions. Stratospheric sensitivities tend to emerge at later lead times than tropospheric sensitivities. The strongest and most robust sensitivities correspond to a Rossby wave precursor reaching from the Pacific basin across North America.

The importance of stratospheric initial conditions for winter North Atlantic Oscillation predictability and implications for the signal鈥恡o鈥恘oise paradox

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society John Wiley and Sons, Ltd. 145:718 (2018) Part A, 131-146

Authors:

Christopher O'Reilly, Antje Weisheimer, Tim Woollings, Lesley Gray, Dave Macleod

Abstract:

This study investigates the influence of atmospheric initial conditions on winter seasonal forecasts of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Hindcast (or reforecast) experiments 鈥 which differ only in their initial conditions 鈥 are performed over the period 1960鈥2009, using prescribed sea surface temperature (SST) and sea鈥恑ce boundary conditions. The first experiment (鈥淓RA鈥40/Int IC鈥) is initialized using the ERA鈥40 and ERA鈥怚nterim reanalysis datasets, which assimilate upper鈥恆ir, satellite and surface observations; the second experiment (鈥淓RA鈥20C IC鈥) is initialized using the ERA鈥20C reanalysis dataset, which assimilates only surface observations. The ensemble mean NAO skill is largest in ERA鈥40/Int IC (r鈥=鈥0.54), which is initialized with the superior reanalysis data. Moreover, ERA鈥20C IC did not exhibit significantly more NAO hindcast skill (r鈥=鈥0.38) than in a third experiment, which was initialized with incorrect (shuffled) initial conditions. The ERA鈥40/Interim and ERA鈥20C initial conditions differ substantially in the tropical stratosphere, where the quasi鈥恇iennial oscillation (QBO) of zonal winds is not present in ERA鈥20C. The QBO hindcasts are highly skilful in ERA鈥40/Int IC 鈥 albeit with a somewhat weaker equatorial zonal wind amplitude in the lower stratosphere 鈥 but are incorrect in ERA鈥20C IC, indicating that the QBO is responsible for the additional NAO hindcast skill; this is despite the model exhibiting a relatively weak teleconnection between the QBO and NAO. The influence of the QBO is further demonstrated by regressing out the QBO influence from each of the hindcast experiments, after which the difference in NAO hindcast skill between the experiments is negligible. Whilst ERA鈥40/Int IC demonstrates a more skilful NAO hindcast, it appears to have a relatively weak predictable signal; this is the so鈥恈alled 鈥渟ignal鈥恡o鈥恘oise paradox鈥 identified in previous studies. Diagnostically amplifying the (weak) QBO鈥揘AO teleconnection increases the ensemble鈥恗ean NAO signal with negligible impact on the NAO hindcast skill, after which the signal鈥恡o鈥恘oise problem seemingly disappears.

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