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Table of Contents

software

1. Ensemble version

TO BE UPDATED
Ensemble identifier codeGloSea6-GC3.2GloSea5-GC2
Short DescriptionGlobal seasonal prediction system which is developed at the Met Office. A Stochastic Kinetic Energy Backscatter scheme(SKEB) was used to generate spread between members initialized from the same analysis. Four ensemble members initialized every day in the cast of the forecast two run for 75 days and two for 240 days. Hindcast (historical re-forecasts) covers the period 1991~2010 and 3 members initialized on fixed calendar dates 1st, 9th, 17th and 25th.Global seasonal prediction system which is developed at the Met Office. A Stochastic Kinetic Energy Backscatter scheme(SKEB) was used to generate spread between members initialized from the same analysis. Four ensemble members initialized every day in the cast of the forecast two run for 75 days and two for 240 days. Hindcast (historical re-forecasts) covers the period 1991~2010 and 3 members initialized on fixed calendar dates 1st, 9th, 17th and 25th.
Research or operationalOperationalOperational
Data time of first forecast run26/04/201626/04/2016

2. Configuration of the EPS



Is the model coupled to an ocean model?YesYes
If yes, please describe ocean model briefly including frequency of coupling and any ensemble perturbation appliedOcean model is NEMO3.4 with a 0.25 degree horizontal resolution, 75 vertical levels, initialized from Met Office Ocean Analysis (NEMOVAR). Frequency of coupling is 3-hourly.Ocean model is NEMO3.4 with a 0.25 degree horizontal resolution, 75 vertical levels, initialized from Met Office Ocean Analysis (NEMOVAR). Frequency of coupling is 3-hourly.
Is the model coupled to a sea Ice model?YesYes
If yes, please describe sea-ice model briefly including any ensemble perturbation appliedSea Ice model is CICE4.1 , initialized from Met Office Analysis (NEMOVAR)Sea Ice model is CICE4.1 , initialized from Met Office Analysis (NEMOVAR)
Is the model coupled to a wave model?NoNo
If yes, please describe wave model briefly including any ensemble perturbation applied

Ocean modelNEMO 0.25 degree resolutionNEMO 0.25 degree resolution
Horizontal resolution of the atmospheric modelN216 (0.83o x 0.56o, about 60 km in mid latitudes)N216 (0.83o x 0.56o, about 60 km in mid latitudes)
Number of model levels8585
Top of model85 km85 km
Type of model levelsterrain-following hybrid height coordinatesterrain-following hybrid height coordinates
Forecast lengthmaximum 240 daysmaximum 240 days
Run Frequencyevery day and make ensemble once a weekevery day and make ensemble once a week
Is there an unperturbed control forecast included?NoNo
Number of perturbed ensemble members4/day4/day
Integration time step15Minutes15Minutes

3. Initial conditions and perturbations



Data assimilation method for control analysis4D Var4D Var
Resolution of model used to generate Control AnalysisN768L70N768L70
Ensemble initial perturbation strategySKEB2SKEB2
Horizontal and vertical resolution of perturbations

Perturbations in +/- pairsNoNo
Initialization of land surface

3.1 What is the land surface model (LSM) and version used in the forecast model, and what are the current/relevant references for the model? Are there any significant changes/deviations in the operational version of the LSM from the documentation of the LSM?The Met Office Seasonal Forecast System version 5 using Global Coupled 2.0 (GloSea5-GC2) uses the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES). The JULES model is described in Best et al. (2011)The Met Office Seasonal Forecast System version 5 using Global Coupled 2.0 (GloSea5-GC2) uses the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES). The JULES model is described in Best et al. (2011)
This model uses a scientific configuration called Global Land 6.0. This science configuration is described in Walters et al. (2016)

 3.2 How is soil moisture initialized in the forecasts? (climatology / realistic / other)? If “climatology”, what is the source of the climatology? If “realistic”, does the soil moisture come from an analysis using the same LSM as is coupled to the GCM for forecasts, or another source? Please describe the process of soil moisture initialization.  If “other”, please describe the process of soil moisture initialization. In GloSea5-GC2 the soil moisture is initialised from a seasonally varying climatology. This climatology was derived from a JULES re-analysis using Global Land 3.0 and forced with the WATCH-Forcing-Data-ERA-Interim forcing set (Wheedon et al, 2014). This re-analysis was completed on a 0.5 degree grid and interpolated to the model resolution (0.83x0.56 degrees). The climatology from this re-analysis has been scaled to match the climatology of our NWP soil moisture climatology. In GloSea5-GC2 the soil moisture is initialised from a seasonally varying climatology. This climatology was derived from a JULES re-analysis using Global Land 3.0 and forced with the WATCH-Forcing-Data-ERA-Interim forcing set (Wheedon et al, 2014). This re-analysis was completed on a 0.5 degree grid and interpolated to the model resolution (0.83x0.56 degrees). The climatology from this re-analysis has been scaled to match the climatology of our NWP soil moisture climatology.
3. How is snow initialized in the forecasts?  (climatology / realistic / other)

If “climatology”, what is the source of the climatology?

If “realistic”, does the snow come from an analysis using the same LSM as is coupled to the GCM for forecasts, or another source? Please describe the process of soil moisture initialization.

If “other”, please describe the process of soil moisture initialization.

Is there horizontal and/or vertical interpolation of data onto the forecast model grid? If so, please give original data resolution(s)

Are snow mass, snow depth or both initialized? What about snow age, albedo, or other snow properties?

Snow is initialised “realistically” from analysis. For the hindcasts this is ERA-Interim and the forecasts use the Met Office NWP global analysis. The Met Office NWP global model uses the same land surface model as GloSea5-GC2. For the hindcast the snow field is interpolated from 0.75x0.75 degrees (ERA-I) to the GloSea5-GC2 grid. Only snow mass is initialized.Snow is initialised “realistically” from analysis. For the hindcasts this is ERA-Interim and the forecasts use the Met Office NWP global analysis. The Met Office NWP global model uses the same land surface model as GloSea5-GC2. For the hindcast the snow field is interpolated from 0.75x0.75 degrees (ERA-I) to the GloSea5-GC2 grid. Only snow mass is initialized.Snow is initialised “realistically” from analysis. For the hindcasts this is ERA-Interim and the forecasts use the Met Office NWP global analysis. The Met Office NWP global model uses the same land surface model as GloSea5-GC2. For the hindcast the snow field is interpolated from 0.75x0.75 degrees (ERA-I) to the GloSea5-GC2 grid. Only snow mass is initialized.
4. How is soil temperature initialized in the forecasts? (climatology / realistic / other)

 If “climatology”, what is the source of the climatology?

If “realistic”, does the soil moisture come from an analysis using the same LSM as is coupled to the GCM for forecasts, or another source? Please describe the process of soil moisture initialization.

If “other”, please describe the process of soil moisture initialization.

Is the soil temperature initialized consistently with soil moisture (frozen soil water where soil temperature ≤0°C) and snow cover (top layer soil temperature ≤0°C under snow)?

Is there horizontal and/or vertical interpolation of data onto the forecast model grid? If so, please give original data resolution(s)

If all model soil layers are not initialized in the same way or from the same source, please describe.Soil temperature is initialised “realistically” from analysis. For the hindcasts this is ERA-Interim and the forecasts use the Met Office NWP global analysis. For the hindcast the soil temperature field is interpolated from 0.75x0.75 degrees (ERA-I) to the GloSea5-GC2 grid. The level in the ERA-interim LSM start at 0, 7, 28, 100cm (https://confluence.ecmwf.int/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=56660259). The GloSea5-GC2 soil model levels are (in metres): (0.0,0.10), (0.10,0.35), (0.35,1.0), (1.0,3.0)Soil temperature is initialised “realistically” from analysis. For the hindcasts this is ERA-Interim and the forecasts use the Met Office NWP global analysis. For the hindcast the soil temperature field is interpolated from 0.75x0.75 degrees (ERA-I) to the GloSea5-GC2 grid. The level in the ERA-interim LSM start at 0, 7, 28, 100cm (https://confluence.ecmwf.intwiki/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=56660259). The GloSea5-GC2 soil model levels are (in metres): (0.0,0.10), (0.10,0.35), (0.35,1.0), (1.0,3.0)
3.5 How are time-varying vegetation properties represented in the LSM?

Is phenology predicted by the LSM? If so, how is it initialized? If so, how is it initialized? If so, how is it initialized?
If not, what is the source of vegetation parameters used by the LSM? Which time-varying vegetation parameters are specified (e.g., LAI, greenness, vegetation cover fraction) and how (e.g., near-real-time satellite observations? Mean annual cycle climatology? Monthly, weekly or other interval?)We do not include phenology. GloSea5 uses a fraction tile system with 9 tiles: 5 plant functional types and 4 non-vegetated types. The fractional values are derived from IGBP. Canopy height of plant functional types is derived from MODIS LAI data. The following variable is time varying and derived from MODIS LAI data:

* Leaf area index of plant functional types

This variable is specified at monthly intervals but there is no inter-annual variation. The initialisation values are interpolated from the monthly time series.

We do not include phenology. GloSea5 uses a fraction tile system with 9 tiles: 5 plant functional types and 4 non-vegetated types. The fractional values are derived from IGBP. Canopy height of plant functional types is derived from MODIS LAI data. The following variable is time varying and derived from MODIS LAI data:

* Leaf area index of plant functional types

This variable is specified at monthly intervals but there is no inter-annual variation. The initialisation values are interpolated from the monthly time series.

3.6 What is the source of soil properties (texture, porosity, conductivity, etc.) used by the LSM?The soil information is derived from the Harmonized World Soil Database.The soil information is derived from the Harmonized World Soil Database.
3.7 If the initialization of the LSM for re-forecasts deviates from the procedure for forecasts, please describe the differences.There are differences between the forecast and re-forecast initialisation. These are described in the relevant sections.There are differences between the forecast and re-forecast initialisation. These are described in the relevant sections.

4. Model Uncertainties perturbations



Is model physics perturbed? If yes, briefly describe methodsSKEB2SKEB2
Do all ensemble members use exactly the same model version?SameSame
Is model dynamics perturbed?YesYes
Are the above model perturbations applied to the control forecast?NoNo

5. Surface boundary perturbations



Perturbations to sea surface temperature?NoNo
Perturbation to soil moisture?NoNo
Perturbation to surface stress or roughness?NoNo
Any other surface perturbation?NoNo
Are the above surface perturbations applied to the Control forecast?N/AN/A
Additional comments

6. Other details of the models



Description of model grid Arakawa-C gridArakawa-C grid
What kind of large scale dynamics is used?semi-lagrangiansemi-lagrangian
What kind of boundary layer parameterization is used?Nolocal Mixing scheme and local Richardson number schemeNolocal Mixing scheme and local Richardson number scheme
What kind of convective parameterization is used?Mass flux schemeMass flux scheme
What kind of large-scale precipitation scheme is used?Walters et al., 2015Walters et al., 2015
What cloud scheme is used?prognostic cloud fractionprognostic cloud fraction
What kind of land-surface scheme is used?JULES Model CoupledJULES Model Coupled
How is radiation parametrized?Walters et al., 2015Walters et al., 2015
Other relevant details?Walters et al., 2015Walters et al., 2015

7. Re-forecast configuration



Number of years covered20 years(1991~2010)20 years(1991~2010)
Produced on the fly or fix re-forecasts?On the flyOn the fly
FrequencyHindcast (historical re-forecasts) initialized on fixed calendar dates 1st, 9th, 17th and 25th.Hindcast (historical re-forecasts) initialized on fixed calendar dates 1st, 9th, 17th and 25th.
Ensemble size3 members / year3 members / year
Initial conditionsERA-InterimERA-Interim
Is the model physics and resolution the same as for the real-time forecastsYesYes
If not, what are the differences

Is the ensemble generation the same as for real-time forecasts?YesYes
If not, what are the differencesN/AN/A

8. References

  • Best, M. J., Pryor, M., Clark, D. B., Rooney, G. G., Essery, R. L. H., Ménard, C. B., Edwards, J. M., Hendry, M. A., Porson, A., Gedney, N., Mercado, L. M., Sitch, S., Blyth, E., Boucher, O., Cox, P. M., Grimmond, C. S. B., and Harding, R. J.: The Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES), model description – Part 1: Energy and water fluxes, Geosci. Model Dev., 4, 677-699, doi:10.5194/gmd-4-677-2011, 2011.
  • Walters, D., Brooks, M., Boutle, I., Melvin, T., Stratton, R., Vosper, S., Wells, H., Williams, K., Wood, N., Allen, T., Bushell, A., Copsey, D., Earnshaw, P., Edwards, J., Gross, M., Hardiman, S., Harris, C., Heming, J., Klingaman, N., Levine, R., Manners, J., Martin, G., Milton, S., Mittermaier, M., Morcrette, C., Riddick, T., Roberts, M., Sanchez, C., Selwood, P., Stirling, A., Smith, C., Suri, D., Tennant, W., Vidale, P. L., Wilkinson, J., Willett, M., Woolnough, S., and Xavier, P.: The Met Office Unified Model Global Atmosphere 6.0/6.1 and JULES Global Land 6.0/6.1 configurations, Geosci. Model Dev. Discuss., doi:10.5194/gmd-2016-194, in review, 2016.
  • Weedon, G. P., G. Balsamo, N. Bellouin, S. Gomes, M. J. Best, and P. Viterbo (2014), The WFDEI meteorological forcing data set: WATCH Forcing Data methodology applied to ERA-Interim reanalysis data, Water Resour. Res., 50, 7505–7514, doi:10.1002/2014WR015638.