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Tim Palmer

Emeritus

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Predictability of weather and climate
Tim.Palmer@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72897
Robert Hooke Building, room S43
  • About
  • Publications

SINGULAR VECTORS - THE EFFECT OF SPATIAL SCALE ON LINEAR GROWTH OF DISTURBANCES

JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES 52:22 (1995) 3885-3894

Authors:

DL HARTMANN, R BUIZZA, TN PALMER
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THE SINGULAR-VECTOR STRUCTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERIC GLOBAL CIRCULATION

JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES 52:9 (1995) 1434-1456

Authors:

R BUIZZA, TN PALMER
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Towards a unified approach to climate and weather prediction

ENVIRONMENT AND QUALITY OF LIFE (1995) 265-280

Authors:

TN PALMER, PJ WEBSTER
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Impact of localized tropical and extratropical SST anomalies in ensembles of seasonal GCM integrations

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 120:520 (1994) 1613-1645

Authors:

L Ferranti, F Molteni, TN Palmer

Abstract:

A series of 120‐day ensemble integrations of a general circulation model, designed to assess the impact of geographically localized sea‐surface‐temperature (SST) anomalies in both the tropics and extratropics, are described. These experiments contribute firstly to an appraisal of the relative roles of tropical and extratropical SST anomalies on interannual variability of the large‐scale circulation in the northern extratropics, and secondly to an assessment of the role of quasi‐stationary diabatic‐heating anomalies on model systematic error, including blocking activity. Overall it is found that SST anomalies associated with El Niño and La Niña have a larger and more reproducible impact on the extratropics than the chosen extratropical SST anomalies. These extratropical anomalies were localized to the north‐west Pacific, and north‐west Atlantic, with realistic amplitude. However, unlike earlier studies, a response to the extratropical North Pacific SST anomalies has been obtained over the North Pacific which is correlated with the sign of the imposed SST anomaly. The response to extratropical SST anomalies in the north‐west Atlantic are similar to the results obtained from an earlier study. The downstream responses to the extratropical Pacific and Atlantic SST anomalies are qualitatively similar to one another. Overall it is concluded that the northern large‐scale flow is influenced by such extratropical SST anomalies. The response to idealized tropical SST anomalies was also studied. In particular, a localized anomaly over Indonesia had a very substantial impact on the Hadley circulation, on zonal flow, and on blocking frequency over the North Pacific and Europe. This response was such as to reduce model systematic error: locally in the vicinity of the SST anomaly, remotely around the tropics, and remotely in the extratropics. A similar, though weaker, impact on Euro‐Atlantic blocking was obtained with an idealized Caribbean SST anomaly. Further statistical and dynamical analyses suggested that the extratropical response to the Indonesian SST anomaly occurs through the creation of two distinct planetary‐scale regimes, in one of which the formation of blocks is much favoured by increased ridges on the north‐eastern side of the oceans. Copyright © 1994 Royal Meteorological Society
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Singular vectors and the predictability of weather and climate

Philosophical Transactions - Royal Society of London, A 348:1688 (1994) 459-475

Authors:

TN Palmer, R Buizza, F Molteni, YQ Chen, S Corti

Abstract:

Singular vector calculations are made using a coupled ocean-atmosphere model of the tropical Pacific region. Results from a multi-decadal integration of a medium-resolution quasi-geostrophic model are shown and the possible relevance of singular vector analysis for the problem of climate change are discussed. -from Authors
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