CICS-NC: Tropical Monitoring

Hovmöllers:


Maps:

Wheeler and Weickmann (2001) developed a method for filtering OLR in real-time to identify, track, and predict the MJO and equatorial waves. This webpage expands on their methodology and applies it to other variables. The filter bands used can be seen on this wavenumber—frequency spectrum.

  • Original:
    • Very similar to the original Wheeler-Weickmann method. One notable difference is that the zonal mean wave variance is maintained constant in the projections. This helps maintain realistic wave amplitudes.

  • No TCs:

  • CFS Forecasts:
    • Instead of appending with climatology as in Wheeler-Weickmann, the observations are instead padded with 45-day forecast anomalies from the CFS. These anomalies are the mean of a 16-member pseudo-ensemble including all four runs each from 00z, 06z, 12z, and 18z yesterday.

The NCL code used to generate this website can be obtained from our git repository.

This website shows longitude-time Hovmöllers and latitude-lognitude maps for OLR, zonal wind (uwnd850 & uwnd200), meridional wind (vwnd850 & vwnd200), velocity potential (chi850 & chi200), and streamfunction (psi850 & psi200) at 850-hPa and 200-hPa.

Shading shows anomalies from climatogy in the past. In the future, shading is either the sum of all modes or the CFS forecast and its departure from its own climatology. Contours identify the MJO, equatorial Rossby waves, Kelvin waves, and the low-frequency background (> 120 days). The filter bands are shown above in the Algorithms. Hurricane symbols denote tropical cyclogenesis identified by NHC and JTWC, with the direction indicating Northern or Southern Hemisphere.

OLR data used here are NOAA's interim Climate Data Record as obtained from Univ. of Maryland. Tropical cyclone data are obtained from NHC and JTWC through NCEP's tcvitals data. All other fields are obtained from CFS analyses.

More tropical diagnostics will be added in the coming months, so please register to receive updates. Created and maintained by Carl Schreck. This work was supported by the NOAA Climate Data Record Program through the Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites - North Carolina under Cooperative Agreement NA14NES432003.


DISCLAIMER: Please note these pages present experimental analyses developed by researchers at CICS-NC and/or of interest to the CICS-NC community and their collaborators. These analyses are subject to change as our understanding of the Earth's climate system improves and/or our interests change. There is no guarantee on their future availability.