Uncertainties in Kelvin Waves in ECMWF Analyses and Forecasts: Insights From Aeolus Observing System Experiments

Žagar, N. ORCIDiD
Rennie, M.
Isaksen, L.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL094716
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/9883
Žagar, N.; Rennie, M.; Isaksen, L., 2021: Uncertainties in Kelvin Waves in ECMWF Analyses and Forecasts: Insights From Aeolus Observing System Experiments. In: Geophysical Research Letters, 48, 22, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL094716. 
 
Rennie, M.; 2 European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts Reading UK
Isaksen, L.; 2 European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts Reading UK

Abstract

The European Space Agency Earth Explorer mission Aeolus with the first spaceborne Doppler Wind Lidar onboard provides global coverage of wind profiles twice per day. This paper discusses the impact of assimilating Aeolus winds on the quality of tropical analyses and forecasts using the observing system experiments of the European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather (ECMWF). Presented examples show that Aeolus wind profiles bring changes to the Kelvin wave structure in the layers with a significant vertical shear during the easterly phase of the quasi‐biennial oscillation in the period May to September 2020. Comparing Kelvin waves in analyses and forecasts with and without Aeolus winds, it is argued that improved ECMWF forecasts in the tropical tropopause layer are due to vertically propagating Kelvin waves.


Plain Language Summary: The tropics are the region with the largest uncertainties in the initial states for numerical weather prediction, called analyses. Analysis uncertainties are largest in the tropical upper troposphere and the lower stratosphere (UTLS). One of the reasons is a lack of wind profiles which are more useful than temperature profiles in the tropics. This classical effect was described by Smagorinsky as “Not all data are equal in their information‐yielding capacity. Some are more equal than others.” ESA's ongoing Aeolus mission provides the first global wind profile observations from space. Despite their small number and relatively large random error, Aeolus winds have a positive impact on the quality of global weather forecasts, especially in the UTLS. In this paper, we discuss the impact of the Aeolus winds in UTLS focusing on the vertically propagating Kelvin waves, which are a major contributor to tropical variability. Several case studies are presented using the ECMWF model and data assimilation with and without Aeolus winds. The studied period May to September 2020 was characterized by a weakening easterly phase of the quasi‐biennial oscillation (QBO). Results suggest that a stronger impact of Aeolus winds in May than later in summer was associated with the QBO and the background flow.


Key Points:

Impact of assimilating Aeolus winds in the ECMWF system from May to September 2020 is coupled to the easterly QBO phase.

Aeolus assimilation modifies the representation of vertically propagating Kelvin waves in the tropical UTLS.

Forecast improvements in May 2020 could be associated with the alteration in the upward‐propagating Kelvin waves.