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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Philipp is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Philipp.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2008

Classifications of Atmospheric Circulation Patterns

Radan Huth; Christoph Beck; Andreas Philipp; Matthias Demuzere; Zbigniew Ustrnul; Monika Cahynova; Jan Kyselý; Ole Einar Tveito

We review recent advances in classifications of circulation patterns as a specific research area within synoptic climatology. The review starts with a general description of goals of classification and the historical development in the field. We put circulation classifications into a broader context within climatology and systematize the varied methodologies and approaches. We characterize three basic groups of classifications: subjective (also called manual), mixed (hybrid), and objective (computer‐assisted, automated). The roles of cluster analysis and principal component analysis in the classification process are clarified. Several recent methodological developments in circulation classifications are identified and briefly described: the introduction of nonlinear methods, objectivization of subjective catalogs, efforts to optimize classifications, the need for intercomparisons of classifications, and the progress toward an optimum, if possible unified, classification method. Among the recent tendencies in the applications of circulation classifications, we mention a more extensive use in climate studies, both of past, present, and future climates, innovative applications in the ensemble forecasting, increasing variety of synoptic–climatological investigations, and steps above from the troposphere. After introducing the international activity within the field of circulation classifications, the COST733 Action, we briefly describe outputs of the inventory of classifications in Europe, which was carried out within the Action. Approaches to the evaluation of classifications and their mutual comparisons are also reviewed. A considerable part of the review is devoted to three examples of applications of circulation classifications: in historical climatology, in analyses of recent climate variations, and in analyses of outputs from global climate models.


Journal of Climate | 2007

Long-term variability of daily north atlantic-european pressure patterns since 1850 classified by simulated annealing clustering

Andreas Philipp; Paul-M. Della-Marta; Jucundus Jacobeit; David R. Fereday; P. D. Jones; Anders Moberg; Heiz Wanner

Abstract Reconstructed daily mean sea level pressure patterns of the North Atlantic–European region are classified for the period 1850 to 2003 to explore long-term changes of the atmospheric circulation and its impact on long-term temperature variability in the central European region. Commonly used k-means clustering algorithms resulted in classifications of low quality because of methodological deficiencies leading to local optima by chance for complex datasets. In contrast, a newly implemented clustering scheme combining the concepts of simulated annealing and diversified randomization (SANDRA) is able to reduce substantially the influence of chance in the cluster assignment, leading to partitions that are noticeably nearer to the global optimum and more stable. The differences between conventional cluster analysis and the SANDRA scheme are significant for subsequent analyses of single clusters—in particular, for trend analysis. Conventional indices used to determine the appropriate number of clusters ...


Journal of Climate | 2006

Daily mean sea level pressure reconstructions for the European-North Atlantic region for the period 1850-2003

T. J. Ansell; P. D. Jones; Rob Allan; David Lister; D. E. Parker; Manola Brunet; Anders Moberg; Jucundus Jacobeit; Philip Brohan; Nick Rayner; Enric Aguilar; Hans Alexandersson; Mariano Barriendos; Theo Brandsma; Nicholas J. Cox; Paul M. Della-Marta; Achim Drebs; D. Founda; Friedrich-Wilhelm Gerstengarbe; K. Hickey; Trausti Jónsson; Jürg Luterbacher; Øyvind Nordli; H. Oesterle; M. Petrakis; Andreas Philipp; Mark J. Rodwell; Óscar Saladié; Javier Sigró; Victoria C. Slonosky

Abstract The development of a daily historical European–North Atlantic mean sea level pressure dataset (EMSLP) for 1850–2003 on a 5° latitude by longitude grid is described. This product was produced using 86 continental and island stations distributed over the region 25°–70°N, 70°W–50°E blended with marine data from the International Comprehensive Ocean–Atmosphere Data Set (ICOADS). The EMSLP fields for 1850–80 are based purely on the land station data and ship observations. From 1881, the blended land and marine fields are combined with already available daily Northern Hemisphere fields. Complete coverage is obtained by employing reduced space optimal interpolation. Squared correlations (r 2) indicate that EMSLP generally captures 80%–90% of daily variability represented in an existing historical mean sea level pressure product and over 90% in modern 40-yr European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Re-Analyses (ERA-40) over most of the region. A lack of sufficient observations over Greenland and...


Journal of Climate | 2008

Cluster Analysis of North Atlantic–European Circulation Types and Links with Tropical Pacific Sea Surface Temperatures

David Fereday; Jeff R. Knight; Adam A. Scaife; Chris K. Folland; Andreas Philipp

Abstract Observed atmospheric circulation over the North Atlantic–European (NAE) region is examined using cluster analysis. A clustering algorithm incorporating a “simulated annealing” methodology is employed to improve on solutions found by the conventional k-means technique. Clustering is applied to daily mean sea level pressure (MSLP) fields to derive a set of circulation types for six 2-month seasons. A measure of the quality of this clustering is defined to reflect the average similarity of the fields in a cluster to each other. It is shown that a range of classifications can be produced for which this measure is almost identical but which partition the days quite differently. This lack of a unique set of circulation types suggests that distinct weather regimes in NAE circulation do not exist or are very weak. It is also shown that the stability of the clustering solution to removal of data is not maximized by a suitable choice of the number of clusters. Indeed, there does not appear to be any robust...


International Journal of Climatology | 2000

Monthly mean pressure reconstruction for the Late Maunder Minimum Period (AD 1675–1715)

Juerg Luterbacher; R. Rickli; C. Tinguely; E. Xoplaki; E. Schüpbach; Daniel Dietrich; J. Hüsler; M. Ambühl; Christian Pfister; P. Beeli; U. Dietrich; A. Dannecker; T. D. Davies; P. D. Jones; V. Slonosky; Astrid E. J. Ogilvie; P. Maheras; Fotini Kolyva-Machera; Javier Martin-Vide; Mariano Barriendos; Maria João Alcoforado; Maria de Fátima Nunes; Trausti Jónsson; Ruediger Glaser; Jucundus Jacobeit; Christoph Beck; Andreas Philipp; U. Beyer; E. Kaas; T. Schmith

The Late Maunder Minimum (LMM; 1675-1715) delineates a period with marked climate variability within the Little Ice Age in Europe. Gridded monthly mean surface pressure fields were reconstructed for this period for the eastern North Atlantic-European region (25°W-30°E and 35-70°N). These were based on continuous information drawn from proxy and instrumental data taken from several European data sites. The data include indexed temperature and rainfall values, sea ice conditions from northern Iceland and the Western Baltic. In addition, limited instrumental data, such as air temperature from central England (CET) and Paris, reduced mean sea level pressure (SLP) at Paris, and monthly mean wind direction in the Oresund (Denmark) are used. The reconstructions are based on a canonical correlation analysis (CCA), with the standardized station data as predictors and the SLP pressure fields as predictand. The CCA-based model was performed using data from the twentieth century. The period 1901-1960 was used to calibrate the statistical model, and the remaining 30 years (1961-1990) for the validation of the reconstructed monthly pressure fields. Assuming stationarity of the statistical relationships, the calibrated CCA model was then used to predict the monthly LMM SLP fields. The verification results illustrated that the regression equations developed for the majority of grid points contain good predictive skill. Nevertheless, there are seasonal and geographical limitations for which valid spatial SLP patterns can be reconstructed. Backward elimination techniques indicated that Paris station air pressure and temperature, CET, and the wind direction in the Oresund are the most important predictors, together sharing more than 65% of the total variance. The reconstructions are compared with additional data and subjectively reconstructed monthly pressure charts for the years 1675-1704. It is shown that there are differences between the two approaches. However, for extreme years the reconstructions are in good agreement.


Hydrological Sciences Journal-journal Des Sciences Hydrologiques | 2006

Atmospheric circulation dynamics linked with prominent discharge events in Central Europe

Jacundus Jacobeit; Andreas Philipp; Matthias Nonnenmacher

Abstract Studies on links between flood events and atmospheric circulation at historical time scales are often constrained by the temporal resolution (monthly or even seasonal) of reconstructed atmospheric pressure fields. Thus, it is necessary to include investigations based on daily resolved data, despite their restricted time spans. In particular, it will be possible to determine circulation pattern sequences preceding prominent discharge events identified from various gauged time series. Based on daily 500-hPa geopotential height fields from the NCEP/NCAR re-analyses, major large-scale circulation pattern sequences for such discharge events in Central Europe are determined by EPCA techniques (principal component analyses extended in the time dimension). Results from different Central European catchment areas are put together for an overview of the most important sequences during winter and summer. They are finally compared with previous results from monthly analyses of historical data.


Detecting and Modelling Regional Climate Change, 2001, ISBN 9783540422396, págs. 321-332 | 2001

Variability of North-Atlantic-European Circulation Patterns Since 1780 and Corresponding Variations in Central European Climate

Christoph Beck; Jucundus Jacobeit; Andreas Philipp

Time series of Central European temperature and precipitation show marked decadal scale variations during the period 1780 to 1995. On the basis of monthly mean SLP grids reconstructed back to 1780 by Jones et al. (1999) basic North-Atlantic European circulation patterns have been derived by means of T-mode principal component analyses. Decadal scale variability of the large scale atmospheric circulation since 1780 is described in terms of indices representing variations in both relative importance and internal characteristics (within-type changes) of the T-mode circulation patterns. The results show that variations of temperature and precipitation in Central Europe may only partly be attributed to changes in relative importance of North-Atlantic-European circulation patterns. Large parts of the observed climatic variability are due to within-type variability of the circulation patterns.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2017

The SCALEX Campaign: Scale-Crossing Land Surface and Boundary Layer Processes in the TERENO-preAlpine Observatory

Bart Wolf; Christian Chwala; Benjamin Fersch; Jakob Garvelmann; W. Junkermann; Matthias Zeeman; Andreas Angerer; Bianca Adler; Christoph Beck; Caroline Brosy; Peter Brugger; Stefan Emeis; Michael Dannenmann; Frederik De Roo; Eugenio Díaz-Pinés; Edwin Haas; Martin Hagen; Irena Hajnsek; Jucundus Jacobeit; Thomas Jagdhuber; N. Kalthoff; Ralf Kiese; Harald Kunstmann; Oliver Kosak; Ronald Krieg; Carsten Malchow; Matthias Mauder; Ralf Merz; Claudia Notarnicola; Andreas Philipp

AbstractScaleX is a collaborative measurement campaign, collocated with a long-term environmental observatory of the German Terrestrial Environmental Observatories (TERENO) network in the mountainous terrain of the Bavarian Prealps, Germany. The aims of both TERENO and ScaleX include the measurement and modeling of land surface–atmosphere interactions of energy, water, and greenhouse gases. ScaleX is motivated by the recognition that long-term intensive observational research over years or decades must be based on well-proven, mostly automated measurement systems, concentrated in a small number of locations. In contrast, short-term intensive campaigns offer the opportunity to assess spatial distributions and gradients by concentrated instrument deployments, and by mobile sensors (ground and/or airborne) to obtain transects and three-dimensional patterns of atmospheric, surface, or soil variables and processes. Moreover, intensive campaigns are ideal proving grounds for innovative instruments, methods, and...


Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2015

Interannual drought index variations in Central Europe related to the large-scale atmospheric circulation—application and evaluation of statistical downscaling approaches based on circulation type classifications

Christoph Beck; Andreas Philipp; Jucundus Jacobeit

This contribution investigates the relationship between the large-scale atmospheric circulation and interannual variations of the standardized precipitation index (SPI) in Central Europe. To this end, circulation types (CT) have been derived from a variety of circulation type classifications (CTC) applied to daily sea level pressure (SLP) data and mean circulation indices of vorticity (V), zonality (Z) and meridionality (M) have been calculated. Occurrence frequencies of CTs and circulation indices have been utilized as predictors within multiple regression models (MRM) for the estimation of gridded 3-month SPI values over Central Europe, for the period 1950 to 2010. CTC-based MRMs used in the analyses comprise variants concerning the basic method for CT classification, the number of CTs, the size and location of the spatial domain used for CTCs and the exclusive use of CT frequencies or the combined use of CT frequencies and mean circulation indices as predictors. Adequate MRM predictor combinations have been identified by applying stepwise multiple regression analyses within a resampling framework. The performance (robustness) of the resulting MRMs has been quantified based on a leave-one-out cross-validation procedure applying several skill scores. Furthermore, the relative importance of individual predictors has been estimated for each MRM. From these analyses, it can be stated that model skill is improved by (i) the consideration of vorticity characteristics within CTCs, (ii) a relatively small size of the spatial domain to which CTCs are applied and (iii) the inclusion of mean circulation indices. However, model skill exhibits distinct variations between seasons and regions. Whereas promising skill can be stated for the western and northwestern parts of the Central European domain, only unsatisfactory skill is reached in the more continental regions and particularly during summer. Thus, it can be concluded that the presented approaches feature the potential for the downscaling of Central European drought index variations from the large-scale circulation, at least for some regions. Further improvements of CTC-based approaches may be expected from the optimization of CTCs for explaining the SPI, e.g. via the inclusion of additional variables in the classification procedure.


Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2014

Mediterranean climate extremes in synoptic downscaling assessments

S. Seubert; Sonia Fernandez-Montes; Andreas Philipp; Elke Hertig; Jucundus Jacobeit; G. Vogt; A. Paxian; Heiko Paeth

The behaviour of precipitation and maximum temperature extremes in the Mediterranean area under climate change conditions is analysed in the present study. In this context, the ability of synoptic downscaling techniques in combination with extreme value statistics for dealing with extremes is investigated. Analyses are based upon a set of long-term station time series in the whole Mediterranean area. At first, a station-specific ensemble approach for model validation was developed which includes (1) the downscaling of daily precipitation and maximum temperature values from the large-scale atmospheric circulation via analogue method and (2) the fitting of extremes by generalized Pareto distribution (GPD). Model uncertainties are quantified as confidence intervals derived from the ensemble distributions of GPD-related return values and described by a new metric called “ratio of overlapping”. Model performance for extreme precipitation is highest in winter, whereas the best models for maximum temperature extremes are set up in autumn. Valid models are applied to a 30-year period at the end of the twenty-first century (2070–2099) by means of ECHAM5/MPI-OM general circulation model data for IPCC SRES B1 scenario. The most distinctive future changes are observed in autumn in terms of a strong reduction of precipitation extremes in Northwest Iberia and the Northern Central Mediterranean area as well as a simultaneous distinct increase of maximum temperature extremes in Southwestern Iberia and the Central and Southeastern Mediterranean regions. These signals are checked for changes in the underlying dynamical processes using extreme-related circulation classifications. The most important finding connected to future changes of precipitation extremes in the Northwestern Mediterranean area is a reduction of southerly displaced deep North Atlantic cyclones in 2070–2099 as associated with a strengthened North Atlantic Oscillation. Thus, the here estimated future changes of extreme precipitation are in line with the discourse about the influence of North Atlantic circulation variability on the changing climate in Europe.

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Radan Huth

Charles University in Prague

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Pere Esteban

University of Barcelona

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Josef Cyrys

University of Augsburg

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S. Seubert

University of Augsburg

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P. D. Jones

University of East Anglia

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Ole Einar Tveito

Norwegian Meteorological Institute

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Elke Hertig

University of Augsburg

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