Ole Johan Aarnes
Norwegian Meteorological Institute
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Featured researches published by Ole Johan Aarnes.
Journal of Climate | 2012
Ole Johan Aarnes; Øyvind Breivik; Magnar Reistad
AbstractThe objective of this study is to compute 100-yr return value estimates of significant wave height using a new hindcast developed by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute. This regional hindcast covers the northeast Atlantic and spans the period 1958–2009.The return value estimates are based upon three different stationary models commonly applied in extreme value statistics: the generalized extreme value (GEV) distribution, the joint GEV distribution for the r largest-order statistic (rLOS), and the generalized Pareto (GP) distribution. Here, the qualitative differences between the models and their corresponding confidence intervals are investigated.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2014
Øyvind Breivik; Ole Johan Aarnes; Saleh Abdalla; Jean-Raymond Bidlot; Peter A. E. M. Janssen
Global return values of marine wind speed and significant wave height are estimated from very large aggregates of archived ensemble forecasts at +240 h lead time. Long lead time ensures that the forecasts represent independent draws from the model climate. Compared with ERA-Interim, a reanalysis, the ensemble yields higher return estimates for both wind speed and significant wave height. Confidence intervals are much tighter due to the large size of the data set. The period (9 years) is short enough to be considered stationary even with climate change. Furthermore, the ensemble is large enough for nonparametric 100 year return estimates to be made from order statistics. These direct return estimates compare well with extreme value estimates outside areas with tropical cyclones. Like any method employing modeled fields, it is sensitive to tail biases in the numerical model, but we find that the biases are moderate outside areas with tropical cyclones.
Journal of Climate | 2013
Øyvind Breivik; Ole Johan Aarnes; Jean-Raymond Bidlot; Ana Carrasco; Øyvind Saetra
AbstractA method for estimating return values from ensembles of forecasts at advanced lead times is presented. Return values of significant wave height in the northeast Atlantic, the Norwegian Sea, and the North Sea are computed from archived +240-h forecasts of the ECMWF Ensemble Prediction System (EPS) from 1999 to 2009. Three assumptions are made: First, each forecast is representative of a 6-h interval and collectively the dataset is then comparable to a time period of 226 years. Second, the model climate matches the observed distribution, which is confirmed by comparing with buoy data. Third, the ensemble members are sufficiently uncorrelated to be considered independent realizations of the model climate. Anomaly correlations of 0.20 are found, but peak events (>P97) are entirely uncorrelated. By comparing return values from individual members with return values of subsamples of the dataset it is also found that the estimates follow the same distribution and appear unaffected by correlations in the e...
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Ole Johan Aarnes; Magnar Reistad; Øyvind Breivik; Elzbieta M. Bitner-Gregersen; Lars Ingolf Eide; Odin Gramstad; Anne Karin Magnusson; Bent Natvig; Erik Vanem
Wind field ensembles from six CMIP5 models force wave model time slices of the northeast Atlantic over the last three decades of the 20th and the 21st centuries. The future wave climate is investigated by considering the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 emission scenarios. The CMIP5 model selection is based on their ability to reconstruct the present (1971–2000) extratropical cyclone activity, but increased spatial resolution has also been emphasized. In total, the study comprises 35 wave model integrations, each about 30 years long, in total more than 1000 years. Here annual statistics of significant wave height are analyzed, including mean parameters and upper percentiles. There is general agreement among all models considered that the mean significant wave height is expected to decrease by the end of the 21st century. This signal is statistically significant also for higher percentiles, but less evident for annual maxima. The RCP8.5 scenario yields the strongest reduction in wave height. The exception to this is the north western part of the Norwegian Sea and the Barents Sea, where receding ice cover gives longer fetch and higher waves. The upper percentiles are reduced less than the mean wave height, suggesting that the future wave climate has higher variance than the historical period.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011
Magnar Reistad; Øyvind Breivik; Hilde Haakenstad; Ole Johan Aarnes; Birgitte Rugaard Furevik; Jean-Raymond Bidlot
Journal of Climate | 2015
Ole Johan Aarnes; Saleh Abdalla; Jean-Raymond Bidlot; Øyvind Breivik
Journal of Marine Systems | 2009
Øyvind Breivik; Yvonne Gusdal; Birgitte Rugaard Furevik; Ole Johan Aarnes; Magnar Reistad
Ocean Engineering | 2018
Elzbieta M. Bitner-Gregersen; Erik Vanem; Odin Gramstad; Torfinn Hørte; Ole Johan Aarnes; Magnar Reistad; Øyvind Breivik; Anne Karin Magnusson; Bent Natvig
Volume 3: Structures, Safety, and Reliability | 2018
Odin Gramstad; Elzbieta M. Bitner-Gregersen; Øyvind Breivik; Anne Karin Magnusson; Magnar Reistad; Ole Johan Aarnes
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Ole Johan Aarnes; Magnar Reistad; Øyvind Breivik; Elzbieta M. Bitner-Gregersen; Lars Ingolf Eide; Odin Gramstad; Anne Karin Magnusson; Bent Natvig; Erik Vanem