Understanding the Factors Controlling MJO Prediction Skill across Events
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更新:2024-04-10 19:31:37 浏览:876次
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摘要
The prediction skill for individual Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) events is highly variable, but the key factors behind this remain unclear. Using the latest hindcast results from the Subseasonal-to-Seasonal (S2S) Phase II models, this study attempts to understand the diverse prediction skill for the MJO events with an enhanced convective anomaly over the eastern Indian Ocean (IO) at the forecast start date, by investigating the preference of the prediction skill to the MJO-associated convective anomalies and low-frequency background states (LFBS). Compared to the low-skill MJO events, the high-skill events are characterized by a stronger intraseasonal convection-circulation couplet over the IO before the forecast start date, which could result in a longer zonal propagation range during the forecast period, thereby leading to a higher score for assessing the prediction skill. The difference in the intraseasonal fields can further be attributed to the LFBS of the IO sea surface temperature (SST) and the quasi-biannual oscillation (QBO), with the high- (low-) skill events corresponding to a warmer (colder) IO and easterly (westerly) QBO phase. The physical link is that a warm IO could increase the low-level convective instability and thus amplify MJO convection over the IO, whereas an easterly QBO phase could weaken the Maritime Continent barrier effect through weakening the static stability near the tropopause, thus favoring eastward propagation of the MJO. It is also found that the combined effects of the IO SST and QBO phases are more effective in influencing the MJO prediction skill than individual LFBS
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