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Impact of Initial Conditions versus External Forcing in Decadal Climate Predictions: A Sensitivity Experiment

Impact of Initial Conditions versus External Forcing in Decadal Climate Predictions: A Sensitivity Experiment
Impact of Initial Conditions versus External Forcing in Decadal Climate Predictions: A Sensitivity Experiment
The impact of initial conditions relative to external forcings in decadal integrations from an ensemble of state-of-the-art prediction models has been assessed using specifically designed sensitivity experiments (SWAP experiments). They consist of two sets of 10-yr-long ensemble hindcasts for two initial dates in 1965 and 1995 using either the external forcings from the “correct” decades or swapping the forcings between the two decades. By comparing the two sets of integrations, the impact of external forcing versus initial conditions on the predictability over multiannual time scales was estimated as the function of lead time of the hindcast. It was found that over time scales longer than about 1 yr, the predictability of sea surface temperatures (SSTs) on a global scale arises mainly from the external forcing. However, the correct initialization has a longer impact on SST predictability over specific regions such as the North Atlantic, the northwestern Pacific, and the Southern Ocean. The impact of initialization is even longer and extends to wider regions when below-surface ocean variables are considered. For the western and eastern tropical Atlantic, the impact of initialization for the 700-m heat content (HTC700) extends to as much as 9 years for some of the models considered. In all models the impact of initial conditions on the predictability of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is dominant for the first 5 years.
0894-8755
4454-4470
Corti, Susanna
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Palmer, Tim
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Balmaseda, Magdalena
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Weisheimer, Antje
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Drijfhout, Sybren
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Dunstone, Nick
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Hazeleger, Wilco
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Kröger, Jürgen
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Pohlmann, Holger
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Smith, Doug
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Storch, Jin-song Von
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Wouters, Bert
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Corti, Susanna
3cdfb483-945a-4bac-a0eb-cc474a2890c5
Palmer, Tim
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Balmaseda, Magdalena
ae1b8b30-d6c4-416b-bed5-7f27917b3b6f
Weisheimer, Antje
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Drijfhout, Sybren
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Dunstone, Nick
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Hazeleger, Wilco
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Kröger, Jürgen
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Pohlmann, Holger
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Smith, Doug
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Storch, Jin-song Von
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Wouters, Bert
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Corti, Susanna, Palmer, Tim, Balmaseda, Magdalena, Weisheimer, Antje, Drijfhout, Sybren, Dunstone, Nick, Hazeleger, Wilco, Kröger, Jürgen, Pohlmann, Holger, Smith, Doug, Storch, Jin-song Von and Wouters, Bert (2015) Impact of Initial Conditions versus External Forcing in Decadal Climate Predictions: A Sensitivity Experiment. Journal of Climate, 28 (11), 4454-4470. (doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00671.1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The impact of initial conditions relative to external forcings in decadal integrations from an ensemble of state-of-the-art prediction models has been assessed using specifically designed sensitivity experiments (SWAP experiments). They consist of two sets of 10-yr-long ensemble hindcasts for two initial dates in 1965 and 1995 using either the external forcings from the “correct” decades or swapping the forcings between the two decades. By comparing the two sets of integrations, the impact of external forcing versus initial conditions on the predictability over multiannual time scales was estimated as the function of lead time of the hindcast. It was found that over time scales longer than about 1 yr, the predictability of sea surface temperatures (SSTs) on a global scale arises mainly from the external forcing. However, the correct initialization has a longer impact on SST predictability over specific regions such as the North Atlantic, the northwestern Pacific, and the Southern Ocean. The impact of initialization is even longer and extends to wider regions when below-surface ocean variables are considered. For the western and eastern tropical Atlantic, the impact of initialization for the 700-m heat content (HTC700) extends to as much as 9 years for some of the models considered. In all models the impact of initial conditions on the predictability of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is dominant for the first 5 years.

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jcli-d-14-00671.1 - Version of Record
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Published date: 1 June 2015
Organisations: Paleooceanography & Palaeoclimate

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 407486
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/407486
ISSN: 0894-8755
PURE UUID: 97d6bab2-e486-4f50-a247-107afae1eacb
ORCID for Sybren Drijfhout: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5325-7350

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Date deposited: 13 Apr 2017 01:01
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:12

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Contributors

Author: Susanna Corti
Author: Tim Palmer
Author: Magdalena Balmaseda
Author: Antje Weisheimer
Author: Nick Dunstone
Author: Wilco Hazeleger
Author: Jürgen Kröger
Author: Holger Pohlmann
Author: Doug Smith
Author: Jin-song Von Storch
Author: Bert Wouters

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