Karoly, D. J., and A. H. Oort, 1987: A comparison of Southern Hemisphere
circulation statistics based on GFDL and Australian analyses. Monthly
Weather Review, 115(9), 2033-2059.
Abstract: Two sets of observed atmospheric circulation statistics
for the Southern Hemisphere (SH) are compared. The first set was compiled
at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) and consists of global
objective analyses of circulation statistics accumulated at individual
rawinsonde stations for the period May 1963-April 1973. The second set
was obtained from daily hemispheric numerical analyses prepared operationally
at the World Meteorological Centre, Melbourne, Australia for the period
September 1972-August 1982. This study extends the earlier comparison of
circulation statistics from station-based and from numerical analysis-based
methods by Lau and Oort for the Northern Hemisphere to the Southern Hemisphere.
The domain used for the comparison is a 5 degree x 5 degree latitude-longitude
grid from 10 degrees to 90 degrees S and seven pressure levels from 1000
to 100 mb. The circulation statistics examined include (i) ten-year averages
of the monthly mean fields (measures of the mean circulation), (ii) ten-year
averages of the standard deviations and covariances of daily values (measures
of the daily transient eddy variability) and (iii) year-to-year standard
deviations of the monthly mean fields (measures of the interannual variability).
The statistics are presented using horizontal maps on pressure surfaces
and latitude-pressure sections of zonal averages.
The two sets of circulation statistics were derived using very different
analysis methods and they apply for different time periods. The similarities
and differences between the statistics from the two datasets indicate the
reliability of the statistics and can be used to define a better composite
set of circulation statistics for the SH.
The relatively large differences in the statistics can generally be attributed
to the sparse conventional observation network in the SH, particularly
over the large ocean regions, and deficiencies in the analysis methods.
The two sets agree reasonably well from 850 to 500 mb over the land masses,
where the observation network is less sparse. In the upper troposphere,
the magnitudes of the daily transient eddy statistics from the Australian
dataset are smaller due to the analysis method and the inclusion of satellite
data. Over the data-sparse regions, the use of the zonal average as the
first guess for the GFDL dataset has led to reduced spatial variability,
smoother fields and underestimation of extreme values.