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Featured researches published by Mio Matsueda.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Future change in wintertime atmospheric blocking simulated using a 20‐km‐mesh atmospheric global circulation model

Mio Matsueda; Ryo Mizuta; Shoji Kusunoki

[1] Future change in the frequency of atmospheric blocking is investigated through present-day (1979-2003) and future (2075-2099) simulations using 20-, 60-, 120-, and 180-km-mesh atmospheric general circulation models (AGCMs) under the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Reports on Emission Scenarios A1B emission scenario, focusing on the Northern Hemisphere winter (December-February). The results of present-day climate simulations reveal that the AGCM with the highest horizontal resolution is required to accurately simulate Euro-Atlantic blocking, whereas the AGCM with the lowest horizontal resolution is in good agreement with reanalysis data regarding the frequency of Pacific blocking. While the lower-resolution models accurately reproduce long-lived Pacific blocking, they are unable to accurately simulate long-lived Euro-Atlantic blocking. This result suggests that the maintenance mechanism of Euro-Atlantic blocking is different from that of Pacific blocking. In the future climate simulations, both frequencies of Euro-Atlantic and Pacific blockings are predicted to show a significant decrease, mainly in the western part of each peak in present-day blocking frequency, where the westerly jet is predicted to increase in strength; no significant change is predicted in the eastern part of each peak. The number of Euro-Atlantic blocking events is predicted to decrease for almost all blocking durations, whereas the decrease in the number of Pacific blockings is remarkable for long-duration events. It is possible that long-lived (>25 days) Euro-Atlantic and Pacific blockings will disappear altogether in the future.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016

The TIGGE Project and Its Achievements

R. Swinbank; Masayuki Kyouda; Piers Buchanan; Lizzie Froude; Thomas M. Hamill; Tim Hewson; Julia H. Keller; Mio Matsueda; John Methven; Florian Pappenberger; Michael Scheuerer; Helen A. Titley; Laurence J. Wilson; Munehiko Yamaguchi

AbstractThe International Grand Global Ensemble (TIGGE) was a major component of The Observing System Research and Predictability Experiment (THORPEX) research program, whose aim is to accelerate improvements in forecasting high-impact weather. By providing ensemble prediction data from leading operational forecast centers, TIGGE has enhanced collaboration between the research and operational meteorological communities and enabled research studies on a wide range of topics.The paper covers the objective evaluation of the TIGGE data. For a range of forecast parameters, it is shown to be beneficial to combine ensembles from several data providers in a multimodel grand ensemble. Alternative methods to correct systematic errors, including the use of reforecast data, are also discussed.TIGGE data have been used for a range of research studies on predictability and dynamical processes. Tropical cyclones are the most destructive weather systems in the world and are a focus of multimodel ensemble research. Their ...


Journal of Climate | 2011

Future Change in Extratropical Cyclones Associated with Change in the Upper Troposphere

Ryo Mizuta; Mio Matsueda; Hirokazu Endo; Seiji Yukimoto

AbstractFuture changes in Northern Hemisphere wintertime storm activity as a consequence of global warming are investigated using the AGCM of Meteorological Research Institute (MRI-AGCM) with horizontal grid sizes of 60 and 20 km. A future (2075–99) climate experiment, in which the change in sea surface temperature (SST) derived from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 3 (CMIP3) multimodel ensemble mean is added to observed SST, is compared with a present-day (1979–2003) climate experiment. Results of three-member simulations using the 60-km model are presented. A single simulation using the 20-km model is also presented, showing that similar results are obtained.In the future climate experiment, the number of intense cyclones (sea level pressure below 980 hPa) shows a significant increase whereas the number of total cyclones shows a significant decrease, similar to the results obtained from the CMIP3 models themselves. The increase in intense cyclones is seen on the polar side and downstream ...


Journal of Climate | 2017

The Resolution Sensitivity of Northern Hemisphere Blocking in Four 25-km Atmospheric Global Circulation Models

Reinhard Schiemann; Marie-Estelle Demory; Len Shaffrey; Jane Strachan; Pier Luigi Vidale; Matthew S. Mizielinski; Malcolm J. Roberts; Mio Matsueda; Michael F. Wehner; Thomas Jung

AbstractThe aim of this study is to investigate if the representation of Northern Hemisphere blocking is sensitive to resolution in current-generation atmospheric global circulation models (AGCMs). An evaluation is conducted of how well atmospheric blocking is represented in four AGCMs whose horizontal resolution is increased from a grid spacing of more than 100 km to about 25 km. It is shown that Euro-Atlantic blocking is simulated overall more credibly at higher resolution (i.e., in better agreement with a 50-yr reference blocking climatology created from the reanalyses ERA-40 and ERA-Interim). The improvement seen with resolution depends on the season and to some extent on the model considered. Euro-Atlantic blocking is simulated more realistically at higher resolution in winter, spring, and autumn, and robustly so across the model ensemble. The improvement in spring is larger than that in winter and autumn. Summer blocking is found to be better simulated at higher resolution by one model only, with li...


Monthly Weather Review | 2011

Predictability of an Atmospheric Blocking Event that Occurred on 15 December 2005

Mio Matsueda; Masayuki Kyouda; Zoltan Toth; Hiroshi Tanaka; Tadashi Tsuyuki

AbstractAtmospheric blocking occurred over the Rocky Mountains at 1200 UTC 15 December 2005. The operational medium-range ensemble forecasts of the Canadian Meteorological Center (CMC), the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA), and the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP), as initialized at 1200 UTC 10 December 2005, showed remarkable differences regarding this event. All of the NCEP members failed to predict the correct location of the blocking, whereas almost all of the JMA members and most of the CMC members were successful in predicting the correct location. The present study investigated the factors that caused NCEP to incorrectly predict the blocking location, based on an ensemble-based sensitivity analysis and the JMA global spectral model (GSM) multianalysis ensemble forecasts with NCEP, regionally amplified NCEP, and globally amplified NCEP analyses.A sensitive area for the blocking formation was detected over the central North Pacific. In this area, the NCEP control analysis experie...


Journal of Climate | 2016

Calibrating Climate Change Time-Slice Projections with Estimates of Seasonal Forecast Reliability

Mio Matsueda; A. Weisheimer; T. N. Palmer

AbstractIn earlier work, it was proposed that the reliability of climate change projections, particularly of regional rainfall, could be improved if such projections were calibrated using quantitative measures of reliability obtained by running the same model in seasonal forecast mode. This proposal is tested for fast atmospheric processes (such as clouds and convection) by considering output from versions of the same atmospheric general circulation model run at two different resolutions and forced with prescribed sea surface temperatures and sea ice. Here output from the high-resolution version of the model is treated as a proxy for truth. The reason for using this approach is simply that the twenty-first-century climate change signal is not yet known and, hence, no climate change projections can be verified using observations. Quantitative assessments of reliability of the low-resolution model, run in seasonal hindcast mode, are used to calibrate climate change time-slice projections made with the same ...


Journal of The Meteorological Society of Japan | 2012

Climate Simulations Using MRI-AGCM3.2 with 20-km Grid

Ryo Mizuta; Hiromasa Yoshimura; Hiroyuki Murakami; Mio Matsueda; Hirokazu Endo; Tomoaki Ose; Kenji Kamiguchi; Masahiro Hosaka; Masato Sugi; Seiji Yukimoto; Shoji Kusunoki; Akio Kitoh


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

Predictability of Euro‐Russian blocking in summer of 2010

Mio Matsueda


Climate Dynamics | 2011

Future changes in the East Asian rain band projected by global atmospheric models with 20-km and 60-km grid size

Shoji Kusunoki; Ryo Mizuta; Mio Matsueda


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

Verification of medium‐range MJO forecasts with TIGGE

Mio Matsueda; Hirokazu Endo

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Hirokazu Endo

Japan Meteorological Agency

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Masayuki Kyouda

Japan Meteorological Agency

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Seiji Yukimoto

Japan Meteorological Agency

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Shoji Kusunoki

Japan Meteorological Agency

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Tadashi Tsuyuki

Japan Meteorological Agency

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Tetsuo Nakazawa

World Meteorological Organization

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Hiromasa Yoshimura

Japan Meteorological Agency

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