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Dive into the research topics where Christophe Cassou is active.

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Featured researches published by Christophe Cassou.


Climate Dynamics | 2013

The CNRM-CM5.1 global climate model: description and basic evaluation

Aurore Voldoire; Emilia Sanchez-Gomez; D. Salas y Melia; Christophe Cassou; Stéphane Sénési; Sophie Valcke; I. Beau; Antoinette Alias; Matthieu Chevallier; Michel Déqué; J. Deshayes; H. Douville; Elodie Fernandez; Gurvan Madec; Eric Maisonnave; Marie-Pierre Moine; Serge Planton; David Saint-Martin; Sophie Szopa; S. Tyteca; Ramdane Alkama; Sophie Belamari; Alain Braun; Laure Coquart; Fabrice Chauvin

A new version of the general circulation model CNRM-CM has been developed jointly by CNRM-GAME (Centre National de Recherches Météorologiques—Groupe d’études de l’Atmosphère Météorologique) and Cerfacs (Centre Européen de Recherche et de Formation Avancée) in order to contribute to phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5). The purpose of the study is to describe its main features and to provide a preliminary assessment of its mean climatology. CNRM-CM5.1 includes the atmospheric model ARPEGE-Climat (v5.2), the ocean model NEMO (v3.2), the land surface scheme ISBA and the sea ice model GELATO (v5) coupled through the OASIS (v3) system. The main improvements since CMIP3 are the following. Horizontal resolution has been increased both in the atmosphere (from 2.8° to 1.4°) and in the ocean (from 2° to 1°). The dynamical core of the atmospheric component has been revised. A new radiation scheme has been introduced and the treatments of tropospheric and stratospheric aerosols have been improved. Particular care has been devoted to ensure mass/water conservation in the atmospheric component. The land surface scheme ISBA has been externalised from the atmospheric model through the SURFEX platform and includes new developments such as a parameterization of sub-grid hydrology, a new freezing scheme and a new bulk parameterisation for ocean surface fluxes. The ocean model is based on the state-of-the-art version of NEMO, which has greatly progressed since the OPA8.0 version used in the CMIP3 version of CNRM-CM. Finally, the coupling between the different components through OASIS has also received a particular attention to avoid energy loss and spurious drifts. These developments generally lead to a more realistic representation of the mean recent climate and to a reduction of drifts in a preindustrial integration. The large-scale dynamics is generally improved both in the atmosphere and in the ocean, and the bias in mean surface temperature is clearly reduced. However, some flaws remain such as significant precipitation and radiative biases in many regions, or a pronounced drift in three dimensional salinity.


Nature | 2008

Intraseasonal interaction between the Madden–Julian Oscillation and the North Atlantic Oscillation

Christophe Cassou

Bridging the traditional gap between the spatio-temporal scales of weather and climate is a significant challenge facing the atmospheric community. In particular, progress in both medium-range and seasonal-to-interannual climate prediction relies on our understanding of recurrent weather patterns and the identification of specific causes responsible for their favoured occurrence, persistence or transition. Within this framework, I here present evidence that the main climate intra-seasonal oscillation in the tropics—the Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO)—controls part of the distribution and sequences of the four daily weather regimes defined over the North Atlantic–European region in winter. North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) regimes are the most affected, allowing for medium-range predictability of their phase far exceeding the limit of around one week that is usually quoted. The tropical–extratropical lagged relationship is asymmetrical. Positive NAO events mostly respond to a mid-latitude low-frequency wave train initiated by the MJO in the western–central tropical Pacific and propagating eastwards. Precursors for negative NAO events are found in the eastern tropical Pacific–western Atlantic, leading to changes along the North Atlantic storm track. Wave-breaking diagnostics tend to support the MJO preconditioning and the role of transient eddies in setting the phase of the NAO. I present a simple statistical model to quantitatively assess the potential predictability of the daily NAO index or the sign of the NAO regimes when they occur. Forecasts are successful in ∼70 per cent of the cases based on the knowledge of the previous ∼12-day MJO phase used as a predictor. This promising skill could be of importance considering the tight link between weather regimes and both mean conditions and the chances of extreme events occurring over Europe. These findings are useful for further stressing the need to better simulate and forecast the tropical coupled ocean–atmosphere dynamics, which is a source of medium-to-long range predictability and is the Achilles’ heel of the current seamless prediction suites.


Journal of Climate | 2009

Why the Western Pacific Subtropical High Has Extended Westward since the Late 1970s

Tianjun Zhou; Rucong Yu; Jie Zhang; Helge Drange; Christophe Cassou; Clara Deser; Daniel L. R. Hodson; Emilia Sanchez-Gomez; Jian Li; Noel Keenlyside; Xiaoge Xin; Yuko Okumura

The western Pacific subtropical high (WPSH) is closely related to Asian climate. Previous examination of changes in the WPSH found a westward extension since the late 1970s, which has contributed to the inter-decadal transition of East Asian climate. The reason for the westward extension is unknown, however. The present study suggests that this significant change of WPSH is partly due to the atmospheres response to the observed Indian Ocean-western Pacific (IWP) warming. Coordinated by a European Unions Sixth Framework Programme, Understanding the Dynamics of the Coupled Climate System (DYNAMITE), five AGCMs were forced by identical idealized sea surface temperature patterns representative of the IWP warming and cooling. The results of these numerical experiments suggest that the negative heating in the central and eastern tropical Pacific and increased convective heating in the equatorial Indian Ocean/ Maritime Continent associated with IWP warming are in favor of the westward extension of WPSH. The SST changes in IWP influences the Walker circulation, with a subsequent reduction of convections in the tropical central and eastern Pacific, which then forces an ENSO/Gill-type response that modulates the WPSH. The monsoon diabatic heating mechanism proposed by Rodwell and Hoskins plays a secondary reinforcing role in the westward extension of WPSH. The low-level equatorial flank of WPSH is interpreted as a Kelvin response to monsoon condensational heating, while the intensified poleward flow along the western flank of WPSH is in accord with Sverdrup vorticity balance. The IWP warming has led to an expansion of the South Asian high in the upper troposphere, as seen in the reanalysis.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2014

Decadal climate prediction: An update from the trenches

Gerald A. Meehl; Lisa M. Goddard; G. J. Boer; Robert J. Burgman; Grant Branstator; Christophe Cassou; Susanna Corti; Gokhan Danabasoglu; Francisco J. Doblas-Reyes; Ed Hawkins; Alicia Karspeck; Masahide Kimoto; Arun Kumar; Daniela Matei; Juliette Mignot; Rym Msadek; Antonio Navarra; Holger Pohlmann; Michele M. Rienecker; T. Rosati; Edwin K. Schneider; Doug Smith; Rowan Sutton; Haiyan Teng; Geert Jan van Oldenborgh; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Stephen Yeager

This paper provides an update on research in the relatively new and fast-moving field of decadal climate prediction, and addresses the use of decadal climate predictions not only for potential users of such information but also for improving our understanding of processes in the climate system. External forcing influences the predictions throughout, but their contributions to predictive skill become dominant after most of the improved skill from initialization with observations vanishes after about 6–9 years. Recent multimodel results suggest that there is relatively more decadal predictive skill in the North Atlantic, western Pacific, and Indian Oceans than in other regions of the world oceans. Aspects of decadal variability of SSTs, like the mid-1970s shift in the Pacific, the mid-1990s shift in the northern North Atlantic and western Pacific, and the early-2000s hiatus, are better represented in initialized hindcasts compared to uninitialized simulations. There is evidence of higher skill in initialize...


Journal of Climate | 2005

Tropical Atlantic Influence on European Heat Waves

Christophe Cassou; Laurent Terray; Adam S. Phillips

Abstract Diagnostics combining atmospheric reanalysis and station-based temperature data for 1950–2003 indicate that European heat waves can be associated with the occurrence of two specific summertime atmospheric circulation regimes. Evidence is presented that during the record warm summer of 2003, the excitation of these two regimes was significantly favored by the anomalous tropical Atlantic heating related to wetter-than-average conditions in both the Caribbean basin and the Sahel. Given the persistence of tropical Atlantic climate anomalies, their seasonality, and their associated predictability, the suggested tropical–extratropical Atlantic connection is encouraging for the prospects of long-range forecasting of extreme weather in Europe.


Journal of Climate | 2004

North Atlantic Winter Climate Regimes: Spatial Asymmetry, Stationarity with Time, and Oceanic Forcing

Christophe Cassou; Laurent Terray; James W. Hurrell; Clara Deser

Abstract The observed low-frequency winter atmospheric variability of the North Atlantic–European region and its relationship with global surface oceanic conditions is investigated based on the climate and weather regimes paradigm. Asymmetries between the two phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) are found in the position of the Azores high and, to a weaker extent, the Icelandic low. There is a significant eastward displacement or expansion toward Europe for the NAO+ climate regime compared to the NAO− regime. This barotropic signal is found in different datasets and for two quasi-independent periods of record (1900–60 and 1950–2001); hence, it appears to be intrinsic to the NAO+ phase. Strong spatial similarities between weather and climate regimes suggest that the latter, representing long time scale variability, can be interpreted as the time-averaging signature of much shorter time scale processes. Model results from the ARPEGE atmospheric general circulation model are used to validate observ...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2009

Cirene: Air—Sea Interactions in the Seychelles—Chagos Thermocline Ridge Region

Jérôme Vialard; J. P. Duvel; Michael J. McPhaden; Pascale Bouruet-Aubertot; Brian Ward; Erica L. Key; D. Bourras; Robert A. Weller; Peter J. Minnett; A. Weill; Christophe Cassou; L. Eymard; Claude Basdevant; Yves Dandonneau; O. Duteil; Takeshi Izumo; C. de Boyer Montégut; Sébastien Masson; F. Marsac; Christophe Menkes; S. Kennan

The Vasco-Cirene program explores how strong air-sea interactions promoted by the shallow thermocline and high sea surface temperature in the Seychelles-Chagos thermocline ridge results in marked variability at synoptic, intraseasonal, and interannual time scales. The Cirene oceanographic cruise collected oceanic, atmospheric, and air-sea flux observations in this region in January–February 2007. The contemporaneous Vasco field experiment complemented these measurements with balloon deployments from the Seychelles. Cirene also contributed to the development of the Indian Ocean observing system via deployment of a mooring and 12 Argo profilers. Unusual conditions prevailed in the Indian Ocean during January and February 2007, following the Indian Ocean dipole climate anomaly of late 2006. Cirene measurements show that the Seychelles-Chagos thermocline ridge had higher-than-usual heat content with subsurface anomalies up to 7°C. The ocean surface was warmer and fresher than average, and unusual eastward cur...


Journal of Climate | 2001

Oceanic Forcing of the Wintertime Low-Frequency Atmospheric Variability in the North Atlantic European Sector: A Study with the ARPEGE Model

Christophe Cassou; Laurent Terray

Abstract The relationship between global sea surface temperatures (SSTs) and the North Atlantic–Europe (NAE) atmospheric circulation is investigated using an ensemble of eight simulations with the ARPEGE atmospheric global circulation model forced with prescribed SSTs over the 1948–97 period. The model mean state is first validated against NCEP reanalyses. The interannual SST-forced variability is then compared to the internal one using analysis of variance (ANOVA) techniques. Both components are maximum in winter over the Northern Hemisphere and the associated potential predictability shows weak but significant values located over the Icelandic low (IL) and the Azores high (AH). The North Atlantic oscillation (NAO) is found to be the leading internal variability mode over the NAE sector as shown by principal component analysis of a control simulation with climatological SSTs. The noise imprint dominates the forced response estimated from the ensemble mean. The latter is related first to the El Nino–South...


Journal of Climate | 2004

Summer Sea Surface Temperature Conditions in the North Atlantic and Their Impact upon the Atmospheric Circulation in Early Winter

Christophe Cassou; Clara Deser; Laurent Terray; James W. Hurrell; Marie Drévillon

Abstract The origin of the so-called summer North Atlantic “Horseshoe” (HS) sea surface temperature (SST) mode of variability, which is statistically linked to the next winters North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), is investigated from data and experiments with the CCM3 atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM). Lagged observational analyses reveal a linkage between HS and anomalous rainfall in the vicinity of the Atlantic intertropical convergence zone. Prescribing the observed anomalous convection in the model generates forced atmospheric Rossby waves that propagate into the North Atlantic sector. The accompanying perturbations in the surface turbulent and radiative fluxes are consistent with forcing the SST anomalies associated with HS. It is suggested that HS can therefore be interpreted as the remote footprint of tropical atmospheric changes. The ARPEGE AGCM is then used to test if the persistence of HS SST anomalies from summer to late fall can feed back to the atmosphere and have an impact on the n...


Journal of Climate | 2007

Investigating the impact of reemerging sea surface temperature anomalies on the winter atmospheric circulation over the North Atlantic

Christophe Cassou; Clara Deser; Michael A. Alexander

Abstract Extratropical SSTs can be influenced by the “reemergence mechanism,” whereby thermal anomalies in the deep winter mixed layer persist at depth through summer and are then reentrained into the mixed layer in the following winter. The impact of reemergence in the North Atlantic Ocean (NAO) upon the climate system is investigated using an atmospheric general circulation model coupled to a mixed layer ocean/thermodynamic sea ice model. The dominant pattern of thermal anomalies below the mixed layer in summer in a 150-yr control integration is associated with the North Atlantic SST tripole forced by the NAO in the previous winter as indicated by singular value decomposition (SVD). To isolate the reemerging signal, two additional 60-member ensemble experiments were conducted in which temperature anomalies below 40 m obtained from the SVD analysis are added to or subtracted from the control integration. The reemerging signal, given by the mean difference between the two 60-member ensembles, causes the S...

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Laurent Terray

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Gokhan Danabasoglu

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Emilia Sanchez-Gomez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Elodie Fernandez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Stephen M. Griffies

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Sergey Danilov

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Mats Bentsen

Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research

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