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Dive into the research topics where Seth Underwood is active.

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Featured researches published by Seth Underwood.


Journal of Climate | 2014

On the Seasonal Forecasting of Regional Tropical Cyclone Activity

Gabriel A. Vecchi; Thomas L. Delworth; Richard Gudgel; Sarah B. Kapnick; Anthony Rosati; Andrew T. Wittenberg; Fanrong Zeng; Whit G. Anderson; V. Balaji; Keith W. Dixon; Liwei Jia; H.-S. Kim; Lakshmi Krishnamurthy; Rym Msadek; William F. Stern; Seth Underwood; Gabriele Villarini; Xiasong Yang; Shaoqing Zhang

AbstractTropical cyclones (TCs) are a hazard to life and property and a prominent element of the global climate system; therefore, understanding and predicting TC location, intensity, and frequency is of both societal and scientific significance. Methodologies exist to predict basinwide, seasonally aggregated TC activity months, seasons, and even years in advance. It is shown that a newly developed high-resolution global climate model can produce skillful forecasts of seasonal TC activity on spatial scales finer than basinwide, from months and seasons in advance of the TC season. The climate model used here is targeted at predicting regional climate and the statistics of weather extremes on seasonal to decadal time scales, and comprises high-resolution (50 km × 50 km) atmosphere and land components as well as more moderate-resolution (~100 km) sea ice and ocean components. The simulation of TC climatology and interannual variations in this climate model is substantially improved by correcting systematic o...


Journal of Climate | 2015

Improved Seasonal Prediction of Temperature and Precipitation over Land in a High-Resolution GFDL Climate Model

Liwei Jia; Xiaosong Yang; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Richard Gudgel; Thomas L. Delworth; Anthony Rosati; William F. Stern; Andrew T. Wittenberg; Lakshmi Krishnamurthy; Shaoqing Zhang; Rym Msadek; Sarah B. Kapnick; Seth Underwood; Fanrong Zeng; Whit G. Anderson; Venkatramani Balaji; Keith W. Dixon

AbstractThis study demonstrates skillful seasonal prediction of 2-m air temperature and precipitation over land in a new high-resolution climate model developed by the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory and explores the possible sources of the skill. The authors employ a statistical optimization approach to identify the most predictable components of seasonal mean temperature and precipitation over land and demonstrate the predictive skill of these components. First, the improved skill of the high-resolution model over the previous lower-resolution model in seasonal prediction of the Nino-3.4 index and other aspects of interest is shown. Then, the skill of temperature and precipitation in the high-resolution model for boreal winter and summer is measured, and the sources of the skill are diagnosed. Last, predictions are reconstructed using a few of the most predictable components to yield more skillful predictions than the raw model predictions. Over three decades of hindcasts, the two most predictable...


Journal of Climate | 2015

Simulation and Prediction of Category 4 and 5 Hurricanes in the High-Resolution GFDL HiFLOR Coupled Climate Model*

Hiroyuki Murakami; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Seth Underwood; Thomas L. Delworth; Andrew T. Wittenberg; Whit G. Anderson; Jan-Huey Chen; Richard Gudgel; Lucas M. Harris; Shian-Jiann Lin; Fanrong Zeng

AbstractA new high-resolution Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) coupled model [the High-Resolution Forecast-Oriented Low Ocean Resolution (FLOR) model (HiFLOR)] has been developed and used to investigate potential skill in simulation and prediction of tropical cyclone (TC) activity. HiFLOR comprises high-resolution (~25-km mesh) atmosphere and land components and a more moderate-resolution (~100-km mesh) sea ice and ocean component. HiFLOR was developed from FLOR by decreasing the horizontal grid spacing of the atmospheric component from 50 to 25 km, while leaving most of the subgrid-scale physical parameterizations unchanged. Compared with FLOR, HiFLOR yields a more realistic simulation of the structure, global distribution, and seasonal and interannual variations of TCs, as well as a comparable simulation of storm-induced cold wakes and TC-genesis modulation induced by the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO). Moreover, HiFLOR is able to simulate and predict extremely intense TCs (Saffir–Simpson h...


Journal of Climate | 2015

Seasonal Predictability of Extratropical Storm Tracks in GFDL’s High-Resolution Climate Prediction Model

Xiaosong Yang; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Rich Gudgel; Thomas L. Delworth; Shaoqing Zhang; Anthony Rosati; Liwei Jia; William F. Stern; Andrew T. Wittenberg; Sarah B. Kapnick; Rym Msadek; Seth Underwood; Fanrong Zeng; Whit G. Anderson; Venkatramani Balaji

AbstractThe seasonal predictability of extratropical storm tracks in the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory’s (GFDL)’s high-resolution climate model has been investigated using an average predictability time analysis. The leading predictable components of extratropical storm tracks are the ENSO-related spatial patterns for both boreal winter and summer, and the second predictable components are mostly due to changes in external radiative forcing and multidecadal oceanic variability. These two predictable components for both seasons show significant correlation skill for all leads from 0 to 9 months, while the skill of predicting the boreal winter storm track is consistently higher than that of the austral winter. The predictable components of extratropical storm tracks are dynamically consistent with the predictable components of the upper troposphere jet flow for both seasons. Over the region with strong storm-track signals in North America, the model is able to predict the changes in statistics of ex...


Journal of Climate | 2016

Improved Simulation of Tropical Cyclone Responses to ENSO in the Western North Pacific in the High-Resolution GFDL HiFLOR Coupled Climate Model*

Wei Zhang; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Hiroyuki Murakami; Thomas L. Delworth; Andrew T. Wittenberg; Anthony Rosati; Seth Underwood; Whit G. Anderson; Lucas M. Harris; Richard Gudgel; Shian-Jiann Lin; Gabriele Villarini; Jan-Huey Chen

AbstractThis study aims to assess whether, and the extent to which, an increase in atmospheric resolution of the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) Forecast-Oriented Low Ocean Resolution version of CM2.5 (FLOR) with 50-km resolution and the High-Resolution FLOR (HiFLOR) with 25-km resolution improves the simulation of the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO)–tropical cyclone (TC) connections in the western North Pacific (WNP). HiFLOR simulates better ENSO–TC connections in the WNP including TC track density, genesis, and landfall than FLOR in both long-term control experiments and sea surface temperature (SST)- and sea surface salinity (SSS)-restoring historical runs (1971–2012). Restoring experiments are performed with SSS and SST restored to observational estimates of climatological SSS and interannually varying monthly SST. In the control experiments of HiFLOR, an improved simulation of the Walker circulation arising from more realistic SST and precipitation is largely responsible for its bett...


Journal of Climate | 2016

The Resolution Dependence of Contiguous U.S. Precipitation Extremes in Response to CO2 Forcing

Karin van der Wiel; Sarah B. Kapnick; Gabriel A. Vecchi; William F. Cooke; Thomas L. Delworth; Liwei Jia; Hiroyuki Murakami; Seth Underwood; Fanrong Zeng

AbstractPrecipitation extremes have a widespread impact on societies and ecosystems; it is therefore important to understand current and future patterns of extreme precipitation. Here, a set of new global coupled climate models with varying atmospheric resolution has been used to investigate the ability of these models to reproduce observed patterns of precipitation extremes and to investigate changes in these extremes in response to increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations. The atmospheric resolution was increased from 2° × 2° grid cells (typical resolution in the CMIP5 archive) to 0.25° × 0.25° (tropical cyclone permitting). Analysis has been confined to the contiguous United States (CONUS). It is shown that, for these models, integrating at higher atmospheric resolution improves all aspects of simulated extreme precipitation: spatial patterns, intensities, and seasonal timing. In response to 2 × CO2 concentrations, all models show a mean intensification of precipitation rates during extreme events of a...


Journal of Climate | 2017

Dominant Role of Subtropical Pacific Warming in Extreme Eastern Pacific Hurricane Seasons: 2015 and the Future

Hiroyuki Murakami; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Thomas L. Delworth; Andrew T. Wittenberg; Seth Underwood; Richard Gudgel; Xiaosong Yang; Liwei Jia; Fanrong Zeng; Karen Paffendorf; Wei Zhang

AbstractThe 2015 hurricane season in the eastern and central Pacific Ocean (EPO and CPO), particularly around Hawaii, was extremely active, including a record number of tropical cyclones (TCs) and the first instance of three simultaneous category-4 hurricanes in the EPO and CPO. A strong El Nino developed during the 2015 boreal summer season and was attributed by some to be the cause of the extreme number of TCs. However, according to a suite of targeted high-resolution model experiments, the extreme 2015 EPO and CPO hurricane season was not primarily induced by the 2015 El Nino tropical Pacific warming, but by warming in the subtropical Pacific Ocean. This warming is not typical of El Nino, but rather of the Pacific meridional mode (PMM) superimposed on long-term anthropogenic warming. Although the likelihood of such an extreme year depends on the phase of natural variability, the coupled GCM projects an increase in the frequency of such extremely active TC years over the next few decades for EPO, CPO, a...


Journal of Climate | 2016

Seasonal Forecasts of Major Hurricanes and Landfalling Tropical Cyclones using a High-Resolution GFDL Coupled Climate Model

Hiroyuki Murakami; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Gabriele Villarini; Thomas L. Delworth; Richard Gudgel; Seth Underwood; Xiaosong Yang; Wei Zhang; Shian-Jiann Lin

AbstractSkillful seasonal forecasting of tropical cyclone (TC; wind speed ≥17.5 m s−1) activity is challenging, even more so when the focus is on major hurricanes (wind speed ≥49.4 m s−1), the most intense hurricanes (category 4 and 5; wind speed ≥58.1 m s–1), and landfalling TCs. This study shows that a 25-km-resolution global climate model [High-Resolution Forecast-Oriented Low Ocean Resolution (FLOR) model (HiFLOR)] developed at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) has improved skill in predicting the frequencies of major hurricanes and category 4 and 5 hurricanes in the North Atlantic as well as landfalling TCs over the United States and Caribbean islands a few months in advance, relative to its 50-km-resolution predecessor climate model (FLOR). HiFLOR also shows significant skill in predicting category 4 and 5 hurricanes in the western North Pacific and eastern North Pacific, while both models show comparable skills in predicting basin-total and landfalling TC frequency in the basins. The...


Journal of Climate | 2016

The Roles of Radiative Forcing, Sea Surface Temperatures, and Atmospheric and Land Initial Conditions in U.S. Summer Warming Episodes

Liwei Jia; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Xiaosong Yang; Richard Gudgel; Thomas L. Delworth; William F. Stern; Karen Paffendorf; Seth Underwood; Fanrong Zeng

AbstractThis study investigates the roles of radiative forcing, sea surface temperatures (SSTs), and atmospheric and land initial conditions in the summer warming episodes of the United States. The summer warming episodes are defined as the significantly above-normal (1983–2012) June–August 2-m temperature anomalies and are referred to as heat waves in this study. Two contrasting cases, the summers of 2006 and 2012, are explored in detail to illustrate the distinct roles of SSTs, direct radiative forcing, and atmospheric and land initial conditions in driving U.S. summer heat waves. For 2012, simulations with the GFDL atmospheric general circulation model reveal that SSTs play a critical role. Further sensitivity experiments reveal the contributions of uniform global SST warming, SSTs in individual ocean basins, and direct radiative forcing to the geographic distribution and magnitudes of warm temperature anomalies. In contrast, for 2006, the atmospheric and land initial conditions are the key drivers. Th...


Journal of Climate | 2017

Seasonal Prediction Skill of Northern Extratropical Surface Temperature Driven by the Stratosphere

Liwei Jia; Xiaosong Yang; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Richard Gudgel; Thomas L. Delworth; Stephan Fueglistaler; Pu Lin; Adam A. Scaife; Seth Underwood; Shian-Jiann Lin

AbstractThis study explores the role of the stratosphere as a source of seasonal predictability of surface climate over Northern Hemisphere extratropics both in the observations and climate model predictions. A suite of numerical experiments, including climate simulations and retrospective forecasts, are set up to isolate the role of the stratosphere in seasonal predictive skill of extratropical near-surface land temperature. It is shown that most of the lead-0-month spring predictive skill of land temperature over extratropics, particularly over northern Eurasia, stems from stratospheric initialization. It is further revealed that this predictive skill of extratropical land temperature arises from skillful prediction of the Arctic Oscillation (AO). The dynamical connection between the stratosphere and troposphere is also demonstrated by the significant correlation between the stratospheric polar vortex and sea level pressure anomalies, as well as the migration of the stratospheric zonal wind anomalies to...

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Thomas L. Delworth

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Liwei Jia

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Fanrong Zeng

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Richard Gudgel

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Xiaosong Yang

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Sarah B. Kapnick

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Andrew T. Wittenberg

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Whit G. Anderson

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Anthony Rosati

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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