Abstract

AbstractThe European Centre for Medium‐range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) extended‐range forecasts display large errors in the representations of Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO) teleconnections over the North Atlantic with a strong underestimation of the impact of the MJO on the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) following an MJO in Phase 2–3. The origin of this error was investigated using a large set of re‐forecasts covering 20 years where part of the atmosphere was relaxed towards the ECMWF Reanalysis v5 (ERA5) reanalysis. These relaxation experiments show that relaxing the Tropics significantly improves the MJO teleconnections associated with Phase 2–3, with a reduction of about 50% in the amplitude error of the teleconnections. However, model errors outside the Tropics also play an important role. Results also suggest that errors in local processes reduce by about 20% the amplitude of the MJO teleconnections over the North Atlantic. Another example of a source of MJO teleconnection errors is the near surface over the Tibetan and Mongolian Plateaux. Nudging this area towards ERA5 improves the representation of the Pacific subtropical jet and the amplitude of MJO teleconnections associated with Phase 2–3 in the extended‐range re‐forecasts. Nudging the stratosphere exerts a comparatively weaker impact on the MJO teleconnections 11–15 days after an MJO in Phase 2–3. Overall, these experiments indicate that there are multiple sources of MJO teleconnection errors, making the representation of realistic MJO teleconnection by dynamical models a particularly challenging task.

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