Ocean Observations to Improve Our Understanding, Modeling, and Forecasting of Subseasonal-to-Seasonal Variability
January 1, 2019·,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
,,,,,,,,,,,·
0 min read
Aneesh C. Subramanian
Magdalena A. Balmaseda
Luca Centurioni
Rajib Chattopadhyay
Bruce D. Cornuelle
Charlotte DeMott
Maria Flatau
Yosuke Fujii
Donata Giglio
Sarah T. Gille
Thomas M. Hamill
Harry Hendon
Ibrahim Hoteit
Arun Kumar
Jae-Hak Lee
Andrew J. Lucas
Amala Mahadevan
Mio Matsueda
SungHyun Nam
Shastri Paturi
Stephen G. Penny
Adam Rydbeck
Rui Sun
Yuhei Takaya
Amit Tandon
Robert E. Todd
Frederic Vitart
Dongliang Yuan
Chidong Zhang
Abstract
Subseasonal-to-seasonal (S2S) forecasts have the potential to provide advance information about weather and climate events. The high heat capacity of water means that the subsurface ocean stores and re-releases heat (and other properties) and is an important source of information for S2S forecasts. However, the subsurface ocean is challenging to observe, because it cannot be measured by satellite. Subsurface ocean observing systems relevant for understanding, modeling, and forecasting on S2S timescales will continue to evolve with the improvement in technological capabilities. The community must focus on designing and implementing low-cost, high-value surface and subsurface ocean observations, and developing forecasting system capable of extracting their observation potential in forecast applications. S2S forecasts will benefit significantly from higher spatio-temporal resolution data in regions that are sources of predictability on these timescales (coastal, tropical, and polar regions). While ENSO has been a driving force for the design of the current observing system, the subseasonal time scales present new observational requirements. Advanced observation technologies such as autonomous surface and subsurface profiling devices as well as satellites that observe the ocean-atmosphere interface simultaneously can lead to breakthroughs in coupled data assimilation (CDA) and coupled initialization for S2S forecasts.
Type
Publication
FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors

Authors
Visiting Scholar (Fall 2019)
Associate Professor at University of Tsukuba. Research on ensemble forecasting, weather/climate predictability, weather regimes, and high-resolution climate modeling. Created and hosts TIGGE and S2S museums for forecast diagnostics.
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors
Authors