Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.

Benchmarking Northern Hemisphere midlatitude atmospheric synoptic variability in centennial reanalysis and numerical simulations

TitoloBenchmarking Northern Hemisphere midlatitude atmospheric synoptic variability in centennial reanalysis and numerical simulations
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2016
AutoriDell'Aquila, Alessandro, Corti S., Weisheimer A., Hersbach H., Peubey C., Poli P., Berrisford P., Dee D., and Simmons A.
RivistaGeophysical Research Letters
Volume43
Paginazione5442-5449
ISSN00948276
Parole chiaveAtmospheric model simulations, Centennial reanalyses, Earth sciences, Geophysics, High frequency variabilities, Midlatitudes, Northern Hemispheres, Plasma diagnostics, Spectrum Analysis, Surface observation, Synoptic variability, Twentieth century
Abstract

The representation of midlatitude winter atmospheric synoptic variability in centennial reanalysis products, which assimilate surface observations only, and atmospheric model simulations constrained by observation-based data sets is assessed. Midlatitude waves activity in twentieth century reanalyses (20CR, ERA-20C) and atmospheric model simulations are compared with those estimated from observationally complete reanalysis products. All reanalyses are in good agreement regarding the representation of the synoptic variability during the last decades of the twentieth century. This suggests that the assimilation of surface observations can generate high-quality extratropical upper air fields. In the first decades of the twentieth century a suppression of high-frequency variability is apparent in the centennial reanalysis products. This behavior does not have a counterpart in the atmospheric model integrations. Since the latter differ from one of the reanalysis products considered here (ERA-20C) only in the assimilation of surface observations, it seems reasonable to attribute the high-frequency variability suppression to the poor coverage of the observations assimilated. ©2016. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.

Note

cited By 0

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84971357101&doi=10.1002%2f2016GL068829&partnerID=40&md5=68ac6267dc41bc6d9d65c6b61d363828
DOI10.1002/2016GL068829
Citation KeyDell'Aquila20165442