Abstract
The ECMWF twentieth century reanalysis (ERA-20C; 1900-2010) assimilates surface pressure and marine wind observations. The reanalysis is single-member, and the background errors are spatiotemporally varying, derived from an ensemble. The atmospheric general circulation model uses the same configuration as the control member of the ERA-20CM ensemble, forced by observationally based analyses of sea surface temperature, sea ice cover, atmospheric composition changes, and solar forcing. The resulting climate trend estimations resemble ERA-20CM for temperature and the water cycle. The ERA-20C water cycle features stable precipitation minus evaporation global averages and no spurious jumps or trends. The assimilation of observations adds realism on synoptic time scales as compared to ERA-20CM in regions that are sufficiently well observed. Comparing to nighttime ship observations, ERA-20C air temperatures are 1 K colder. Generally, the synoptic quality of the product and the agreement in terms of climate indices with other products improve with the availability of observations. The MJO mean amplitude in ERA-20C is larger than in 20CR version 2c throughout the century, and in agreement with other reanalyses such as JRA-55. A novelty in ERA-20C is the availability of observation feedback information. As shown, this information can help assess the product's quality on selected time scales and regions.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 4083-4097 |
| Number of pages | 15 |
| Journal | Journal of Climate |
| Volume | 29 |
| Issue number | 11 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jun 1 2016 |
Keywords
- Data assimilation
- Interannual variability
- Models and modeling
- Reanalysis data
- Variability