The Madden-Julian
Oscillation (MJO) is the dominant tropical intraseasonal mode and a potential
source of untapped predictability in both the tropics and extratropics. Though many
general circulation models (GCMs), including the NCEP Global Forecast System
(GFS) and Climate Forecast System (CFS) model, have been found to be capable of
capturing some observed dynamical features of the MJO, a realistic representation
of the observed precipitation variability associated with MJO, which is more
desirable because of the latent heat released by precipitation driving
teleconnections and leading to useful predictability, remains to be a common
difficulty in the GCM simulations.
A recent study by
Jia-Lin Lin of NOAA-CIRES Climate
Diagnostics Center and Wanqiu Wang of NCEP/Climate Prediction Center evaluated
the MJO simulations in terms of precipitation variability by the NCEP GFS and
CFS models with vertical resolutions of 28- and 64- atmospheric layers. Eight
years of daily precipitation from each model simulations were analyzed and
compared with two observational datasets, i.e.
GOES Precipitation Index (GPI)
and Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP)
One-Degree-Daily (1DD)
Precipitation. The MJO was defined as the tropical eastward propagating waves
with wavenumber 1-6 and period 30-70 days. The results showed that the MJO
precipitation signals in the NCEP models had too weak variance (Fig.1) and lacked
a pronounced spectral peak (Fig. 2) for overly strong persistence.
The MJO encompasses many key physical processes, such
as convection, clouds, and planetary boundary layer etc. Further analysis at the process level to explore the
reasons for the weakness is in progress.