An anatomy of Arctic sea ice forecast biases in the seasonal prediction system with EC-Earth

被引:0
|
作者
Rubén Cruz-García
Pablo Ortega
Virginie Guemas
Juan C. Acosta Navarro
François Massonnet
Francisco J. Doblas-Reyes
机构
[1] Barcelona Supercomputing Center,
[2] Météo-France,undefined
[3] CNRM,undefined
[4] CNRS,undefined
[5] Groupe de Meteorologie Grande Echelle et Climat,undefined
[6] Université catholique de Louvain,undefined
[7] Georges Lemaître Centre for Earth and Climate Research,undefined
[8] Earth and Life Institute,undefined
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2021年 / 56卷
关键词
Arctic; Sea ice; Bias; Forecast; Shock; Initialization;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The quality of initial conditions (ICs) in climate predictions controls the level of skill. Both the use of the latest high-quality observations and of the most efficient assimilation method are of paramount importance. Technical challenges make it frequent to assimilate observational information independently in the various model components. Inconsistencies between the ICs obtained for the different model components can cause initialization shocks. In this study, we identify and quantify the contribution of the ICs inconsistency relative to the model inherent bias (in which the Arctic is generally too warm) to the development of sea ice concentration forecast biases in a seasonal prediction system with the EC-Earth general circulation model. We estimate that the ICs inconsistency dominates the development of forecast biases for as long as the first 24 (19) days of the forecasts initialized in May (November), while the development of model inherent bias dominates afterwards. The effect of ICs inconsistency is stronger in the Greenland Sea, in particular in November, and mostly associated to a mismatch between the sea ice and ocean ICs. In both May and November, the ICs inconsistency between the ocean and sea ice leads to sea ice melting, but it happens in November (May) in a context of sea ice expansion (shrinking). The ICs inconsistency tend to postpone (accelerate) the November (May) sea ice freezing (melting). Our findings suggest that the ICs inconsistency might have a larger impact than previously suspected. Detecting and filtering out this signal requires the use of high frequency data.
引用
收藏
页码:1799 / 1813
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Regional Ice Prediction System (RIPS): verification of forecast sea ice concentration
    Lemieux, Jean-Francois
    Beaudoin, Christiane
    Dupont, Frederic
    Roy, Francois
    Smith, Gregory C.
    Shlyaeva, Anna
    Buehner, Mark
    Caya, Alain
    Chen, Jack
    Carrieres, Tom
    Pogson, Lynn
    DeRepentigny, Patricia
    Plante, Andre
    Pestieau, Paul
    Pellerin, Pierre
    Ritchie, Hal
    Garric, Gilles
    Ferry, Nicolas
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 142 (695) : 632 - 643
  • [42] Sea ice forecast verification in the Canadian Global Ice Ocean Prediction System
    Smith, Gregory C.
    Roy, Francois
    Reszka, Mateusz
    Surcel Colan, Dorina
    He, Zhongjie
    Deacu, Daniel
    Belanger, Jean-Marc
    Skachko, Sergey
    Liu, Yimin
    Dupont, Frederic
    Lemieux, Jean-Francois
    Beaudoin, Christiane
    Tranchant, Benoit
    Drevillon, Marie
    Garric, Gilles
    Testut, Charles-Emmanuel
    Lellouche, Jean-Michel
    Pellerin, Pierre
    Ritchie, Harold
    Lu, Youyu
    Davidson, Fraser
    Buehner, Mark
    Caya, Alain
    Lajoie, Manon
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 142 (695) : 659 - 671
  • [43] Prospects for Seasonal Prediction of Summertime Trans-Arctic Sea Ice Path
    Winton, Michael
    Bushuk, Mitchell
    Zhang, Yongfei
    Hurlin, Bill
    Jia, Liwei
    Johnson, Nathaniel C.
    Lu, Feiyu
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2022, 35 (13) : 4253 - 4263
  • [44] Ocean heat transport into the Arctic in the twentieth and twenty-first century in EC-Earth
    Koenigk, Torben
    Brodeau, Laurent
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2014, 42 (11-12) : 3101 - 3120
  • [45] Boundary layer stability and Arctic climate change: a feedback study using EC-Earth
    R. Bintanja
    E. C. van der Linden
    W. Hazeleger
    Climate Dynamics, 2012, 39 : 2659 - 2673
  • [46] Prediction of the Arctic Sea Ice Characteristics for Summer Seasons Using the INM RAS Earth System Model
    Bragina, V.V.
    Tarasevich, M.A.
    Volodin, E.M.
    Russian Meteorology and Hydrology, 2024, 49 (08) : 681 - 690
  • [47] Arctic sea ice decline: Faster than forecast
    Stroeve, Julienne
    Holland, Marika M.
    Meier, Walt
    Scambos, Ted
    Serreze, Mark
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2007, 34 (09)
  • [48] Albedo evolution of seasonal Arctic sea ice
    Perovich, Donald K.
    Polashenski, Christopher
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2012, 39
  • [49] Arctic summer sea-ice seasonal simulation with a coupled model: Evaluation of mean features and biases
    P P Saheed
    Ashis K Mitra
    Imranali M Momin
    E N Rajagopal
    Helene T Hewitt
    Ann B Keen
    Sean F Milton
    Journal of Earth System Science, 2019, 128
  • [50] Arctic summer sea-ice seasonal simulation with a coupled model: Evaluation of mean features and biases
    Saheed, P. P.
    Mitra, Ashis K.
    Momin, Imranali M.
    Rajagopal, E. N.
    Hewitt, Helene T.
    Keen, Ann B.
    Milton, Sean F.
    JOURNAL OF EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE, 2019, 128 (01)