Edward Berry, NWS and Klaus Weickmann, CDC
At the time of our last update (22 December 2004) the MJO signal was still
very weak. The circulation in the Pacific North American region had
just transitioned to a positive PNA pattern in association with a strong
flareup of convection west of the dateline. Since that time convection
has redeveloped further west over Indonesia and the PNA region circulation
anomalies have again retrograded, producing a strong ridge near 160W. A
weak-moderate MJO also seems in the process of moving over the west Pacific
region although the confidence in this continuing is below average.
The mid-latitude westerly flow continues to be weaker than normal with
a pronounced "split flow" over the oceans. There are indications of
a shift toward increasing the westerly flow near the equator and possibly
in the mid-latitudes. A strong stratospheric vortex is in place consistent
with a positive phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation.
For information on the status of El Nino and the MJO see the following links:
Part 1. Weather-Climate Overview
Figure 1 (below) shows Hovmoller plots of outgoing longwave radiation
anomalies (OLRA) for the equatorial and southern tropics. OLR
anomalies are used as a proxy for deep tropical convection anomalies. The
contours isolate three coherent OLR modes, including the Madden Julian Oscillation
(MJO), the Kelvin wave and the equatorial Rossby wave. The red shading
(negative OLR anomalies) shows convective flareups have continued over the
Indian Ocean and the west Pacific Ocean (see previous discussions). Convection
anomalies have been more persistent over the equatorial Indian Ocean while
they are more transient over the west Pacific with a recurrence interval
of 20-30 days. This time scale should continue to be important.
The eastward shift of negative OLR anomalies at the bottom of both panels
projects onto a weak MJO (~10 W/m2 anomaly in OLR) according
to the coherent OLR mode contours. This is supported by the phase
space diagram of Wheeler (click
here), which shows a weak to moderate MJO starting over the western
Indian Ocean on about 25 December. It is currently over the western
Pacific Ocean and weakening (< 1 sigma anomaly). Recent satellite
images show a tropical depression at 10N, 140E suggesting MJO convective forcing
has matured over the western Pacific Ocean. Convection also continues
to stay active over Africa and the west Indian Ocean. For the latest
satellite imagery see: Latest
Indian Ocean Satellite Picture; Latest Western Pacific Satellite
Picture
Figure 1 latest images
Part 2. Technical assessment of recent subseasonal variability
In this section we take a long term perspective on recent subseasonal
variations of the atmosphere and make a scientific assessment of forcing-response
relationships among various physical processes. This technical analysis
may be too detailed for some readers. Those desiring a discussion
of the forecast insights only can skip to Part 3 of this discussion. However,
the important forecast issues are brought into perspective by the analysis
in this section.
Fig. 2 (below) shows the time mean anomalies in northern hemisphere 500
hPa geopotential height and tropical global vector wind for 1 September
2004 through 10 January 2005, a 132 day average. This period was averaged
because an anomalous meridional transport of westerly momentum transport
out of mid-latitudes started in early September 2004 (shown later). Since
then, episodic zonal momentum transports out of mid-latitudes have recurred
and have given rise to the large amplitude split flow pattern seen in the
top panel of Fig. 2. Midlatitude anticyclones over the oceans accompany the
split flow and are largest at the exit regions of the east Asian and North
American jets. In the tropics Fig. 2 (panel 2) a pattern of twin anticyclones
over most regions of the globe and twin cyclones in the Indonesia region
are linked with the midlatitude split flow.
Figure 2
A preliminary assessment of the forcing for the tropical wind anomalies
is obtained by viewing Fig. 3 (below). The figure shows the four stages of
our synoptic model for the MJO portion only (see
webpage discussion for more information). The heavy shading highlights
negative OLR anomalies and shows the typical eastward shift that occurs during
a MJO. The blue and red shading represent the subtropical twin cyclones
and anticyclones respectively that accompany the convection. In Stage
4 convection is more or less active at three locations: near the dateline
(barely), over South America and over Africa/the Indian Ocean. Suppressed
convection is seen over Indonesia and the west Pacific Ocean. Despite being
used for the MJO these pictures also provide clues about the circulation's
"response" when tropical convective forcing is more persistent than a MJO,
as occurred during the recent 132-day period. We have already referred
to the persistent African/Indian Ocean convection, the transient flareups
over the west Pacific and the suppressed conditions over Indonesia when discussing
Fig. 1. Such forcing would favor a circulation regime somewhere between
Stage 4 to Stage 1. The latter even has a weak signal of split flow
in the northern mid-latitudes. The persistent convection over the Indian
Ocean may be partially related to weak positive SST anomalies there and the
seasonal suppression of convection over the larger positive SST anomalies
near the dateline (especially seen in Nino 4, the farther west index). Alternatively,
stochastic forcing of the circulation due to wave mean flow interaction,
baroclinic life cycles and meridional momentum transports is another important
mechanism.
Figure 3
Figure 4 (below) illustrates time history of the zonal mean split flow
regime. The negative zonal wind anomalies (easterly flow anomaly) that
define the split flow are first seen in early September 2004 and can be
loosely organized into three distinct episodes: 1) throughout most of September
and early October 2004, 2) during the first 20 days of November 2004 and
3) from about December 15 to the present (January 12, 2005). In the
intervening periods the split flow weakens or changes sign.
Figure 4
The zonal mean picture in Fig. 4 does not show which regions are contributing
to the split flow or how it is shifting around with time. A regional
picture of the mid-latitude's (30-60N) split flow evolution is presented
in Fig. 5 (see below). The annotations are extensive but the figure
shows a 130-day period that includes ~35 synoptic systems, ~15 baroclinic
life cycles and the 20-30 day variations seen in equatorial convection. The
highlighted features have been confirmed as coherent using daily animations
of various fields. Recall that the time mean split flow is located
at the exit regions of the mid-latitude jet streams. In Fig. 5 this is represented
by a H, L pattern in the Pacific North American region and a similar H, L
over the Atlantic Ocean/Europe. If we concentrate on the PNA region,
three amplified split flow periods have been highlighted. The first and the
third are quasi-stationary in space while the second is linked with a westward
propagation across the date line. In all three cases the split flow
is alternating with a combined flow (L, H pattern). The former projects
onto a negative PNA teleconnection pattern whereas the latter onto the positive
phase. This alternation is later linked to transient convective flareups
over the western Pacific described in Fig. 1 and the persistent forcing of
convection over the Indian Ocean.
Finally, Fig. 5 also has highlighted and labelled: a) a prominent
September 15th baroclinic wave packet, b) a succession of six synotic-scale
anticyclones in the last month and c) an October 15th isolated wave breaking
event. The recent anticyclonic amplifications over the Atlantic Ocean
contribute strongly to the 130-day time mean although prominent anticyclones
also developed there during late September and mid-November 2004. The
North Atlantic Oscillation is generally negative during this time and becomes
positive on about 15 December in association with the first of six amplifying
anticyclones over the Atlantic Ocean. The central Pacific Ocean anticyclone
develops later on 22 December after retrograding off the USA west coast.
Figure 5
Tropical convection can be persistent (i.e., it lasts longer than a synoptic life cycle) and can thus force a Rossby wave response such that the convection leads the circulation anomaly. Feedbacks from other processes can obscure the relationship between the tropical convection and the circulation at any time. This leads to noise in a "signal" that for MJO purposes is shown in the synoptic model (Fig. 3). Figure 6 (see below) addresses the question of the relationship between tropical convection and the circulation anomalies over the PNA region. Three pairs of contemporaneous 7-day averaged 150 mb vector wind and OLR anomaly patterns are shown in Fig. 6.
Figure 6
The three represent cases where there is an alternation from a cyclone
anomaly east of the date line (left side column) to an anticyclone in the
same region (right side column). The left column leads the right one
in time. In Fig. 6 we number the bottom row (1) to the top row (3).
These numbers (1-3) are marked on Fig. 1 for convection/OLR and on
Fig. 5 for the 250 mb geopotential height. To understand fully the simultaneous
OLR/convection anomalies requires a detailed analysis but some broad obervations
are possible. In the bottom panel the convection shifts from the west
Pacific to the Indian Ocean as the circulation changes from cyclone to anticyclone.
In the middle panel, northwestward propagation of convection occurs
and the Pacific Ocean circulation anomalies also retrograde. In the
top panel, the strongest OLR anomalies lead the circulation. The simultaneous
pictures in this case show weakening convection over the west Pacific (top,
left) and eastward shifted convection over Indonesia (top, right). The
split flow in this case takes on a large zonal scale suggesting a dynamical
interaction with the climatological flow is initiated. This can lead
to more persistence of the anomaly.
3. Predictive Insights
In the 22 December 2004 discussion, we suggested the on-going retrogression and increasing tropical convection across Indonesia and southcentral Africa could lead to Stage 1 of the SDM ( link to discussion with SDM ) by week 2 (the period of 30 December to 05 January 2005). This favors a trough along the USA west coast and a negative phase of the PNA (see PNA index)). The pattern would suggest a stormy situation for at least Rockies and Plains, with colder (warmer) than normal temperatures for the west (southeast). Confidence was low due to a lack of a MJO signal at that time.
Convection did continue to increase and consolidate around 5S/120E, and
move east as a weak to moderate MJO. The weather was very active for
most of country during this outlook period, particularly from California
into the central states. Very heavy and devastating precipitation occurred
in California, and a strong winter storm system affected the Plains and Midwest
states with heavy snow and rain. Temperatures were generally below (above)
normal across much of the west (southeast). While our outlook had reasonable
success, we did not predict the extreme precipitation event for California
nor the evolution of the tropical convection into a MJO. Also, the
circulation continued to display characteristics of an intermediate structure
between Stages 1 and 4 of the SDM.
Currently, the MJO signal has once again become weak. In fact, the
centriod of the tropical convection associated with the MJO has actually shifted
back to the west over the last couple of days, and is around 140E on the
equator. Furthermore, this area of convection is splitting. At
this time (14 January 2005) there is a weak tropical cyclone developing across
the northwest Pacific Ocean and thunderstorm activity is increasing along
the South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ). Tropical convection is also
again increasing across South Africa and the South Indian Ocean.
As of 13 January 2005, animations of 150mb vector wind anomalies (link to latest 30-day animation) show a western Pacific wave train, typical of Stage 2 of the SDM, tied to the western Pacific convection. This has led to a cold regime for particularly the central USA. Additionally, zonal mean westerly flow has increased throughout the tropics and subtropics, leading to a recent increase of global atmospheric angular momentum (latest plot). Split flow still persists across the northern (and southern) hemisphere. Since the MJO signal is weak, numerical and statistical predictions of a MJO cannot be considered useful at this time (see latest MJO forecasts ).
Confidence in the upcoming week 1 outlook is good, due to generally good numerical model agreement and the assessment of the current weather-climate situation. For weeks 2 and 3 confidence is low due to the lack of a strong MJO signal at the present time and to the events discussed in the previous section. Our predictive insights are given below.
Week 1 (15-21 January 2005): The general increase of westerly flow
throughout the northern subtropics is expected to lead to a progression of
the recent anomalies across the Pacific-North American sector. By the
end of this period the ridge should progress to around 115-120W, as part of
a split flow pattern across western North America. Troughs are expected
to be located around 150W and 70W. This state has a weak to moderate
projection onto the positive phase of the PNA. Over the lower 48 states,
a subtropical jet should continue across the southern states with the polar
jet extending from the Pacific Northwest to the Mid-Atlantic states.
This situation would be expected during Stage 3 of the SDM (see Fig.3 for
the locations of the tropical convective forcing).
The weather across the continental US should become generally mild and
tranquil during this week 1 period. At least the western two-thirds
of the country should experience above normal temperatures by the end of next
week, while the east coast may be a bit colder than normal. There should
not be much Arctic air in the country by the end of this period. Most
of the country should have little precipitation. The important exception
may be the Pacific Northwest states, which could have significant precipitation
toward the end of this period. Additionally, this precipitation may
start to move south. Also, there may continue to be light-moderate snow
events across the Great Lakes (in addition to episodic heavy lake effect snows)
and Northeast states with "clipper" systems (cyclogenesis off the New England
coast will have to be monitored).
Week 2 (22-28 January 2005): This is the period when the general
zonal mean westerly flow across the subtropics may weaken, as tropical convective
forcing could become quite intense across the Indian Ocean and perhaps even
Indonesia, in addition to remaining strong across much of Brasil and southern
Africa. A circulation structure similar to Stage 4 of the SDM would
be expected. For the USA that would mean the heaviest precipitation
would shift southward along the west coast, including California, by the end
of this outlook period. Precipitation may also start to increase for
the Rocky Mountain states, especially west of the Continental Divide.
The rest of the country may have only light precipitation. While the
western states start to cool, the eastern and particularly the southeast part
of the country may shift to warmer than normal temperatures.
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