84th AMS Annual Meeting

Tuesday, 13 January 2004: 4:30 PM
Stratospheric memory and skill of subseasonal forecasts
Room 6C
Mark P. Baldwin, Northwest Research Associates, Bellevue, WA; and D. Stephenson, D. W. J. Thompson, T. J. Dunkerton, A. J. Charlton, and A. O'Neill
We use an empirical statistical model to demonstrate significant skill in subseasonal forecasts of the monthly-mean Arctic Oscillation (AO). Forecast skill derives from persistent circulation anomalies in the lowermost stratosphere and is greatest during boreal winter. A comparison to the Southern Hemisphere provides evidence that both the timescale and predictability of the AO depend on the presence of persistent circulation anomalies just above the tropopause. These circulation anomalies most likely affect the troposphere through changes to waves in the upper troposphere, which induce surface pressure changes corresponding to the AO.

Supplementary URL: