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Featured researches published by Tim Kruschke.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016

MiKlip - a National Research Project on Decadal Climate Prediction

Jochem Marotzke; Wolfgang A. Müller; F. S. E. Vamborg; Paul Becker; Ulrich Cubasch; Hendrik Feldmann; Frank Kaspar; C. Kottmeier; Camille Marini; Iuliia Polkova; Kerstin Prömmel; Henning W. Rust; Detlef Stammer; Uwe Ulbrich; Christopher Kadow; Armin Köhl; Jürgen Kröger; Tim Kruschke; Joaquim G. Pinto; Holger Pohlmann; Mark Reyers; Marc Schröder; Frank Sienz; Claudia Timmreck; Markus Ziese

AbstractMittelfristige Klimaprognose (MiKlip), an 8-yr German national research project on decadal climate prediction, is organized around a global prediction system comprising the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM) together with an initialization procedure and a model evaluation system. This paper summarizes the lessons learned from MiKlip so far; some are purely scientific, others concern strategies and structures of research that target future operational use.Three prediction system generations have been constructed, characterized by alternative initialization strategies; the later generations show a marked improvement in hindcast skill for surface temperature. Hindcast skill is also identified for multiyear-mean European summer surface temperatures, extratropical cyclone tracks, the quasi-biennial oscillation, and ocean carbon uptake, among others. Regionalization maintains or slightly enhances the skill in European surface temperature inherited from the global model and also displays h...


Tellus A | 2014

Evaluating decadal predictions of northern hemispheric cyclone frequencies

Tim Kruschke; Henning W. Rust; Christopher Kadow; Gregor C. Leckebusch; Uwe Ulbrich

Mid-latitudinal cyclones are a key factor for understanding regional anomalies in primary meteorological parameters such as temperature or precipitation. Extreme cyclones can produce notable impacts on human society and economy, for example, by causing enormous economic losses through wind damage. Based on 41 annually initialised (1961–2001) hindcast ensembles, this study evaluates the ability of a single-model decadal forecast system (MPI-ESM-LR) to provide skilful probabilistic three-category forecasts (enhanced, normal or decreased) of winter (ONDJFM) extra-tropical cyclone frequency over the Northern Hemisphere with lead times from 1 yr up to a decade. It is shown that these predictions exhibit some significant skill, mainly for lead times of 2–5 yr, especially over the North Atlantic and Pacific. Skill for intense cyclones is generally higher than for all detected systems. A comparison of decadal hindcasts from two different initialisation techniques indicates that initialising from reanalysis fields yields slightly better results for the first forecast winter (month 10–15), while initialisation based on an assimilation experiment provides better skill for lead times between 2 and 5 yr. The reasons and mechanisms behind this predictive skill are subject to future work. Preliminary analyses suggest a strong relationship of the models skill over the North Atlantic with the ability to predict upper ocean temperatures modulating lower troposphere baroclinicity for the respective area and time scales.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2015

Discontinuous Daily Temperatures in the WATCH Forcing Datasets

Henning W. Rust; Tim Kruschke; Andreas Dobler; Madlen Fischer; Uwe Ulbrich

AbstractThe Water and Global Change (WATCH) forcing datasets have been created to support the use of hydrological and land surface models for the assessment of the water cycle within climate change studies. They are based on 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA-40) or ECMWF interim reanalysis (ERA-Interim) with temperatures (among other variables) adjusted such that their monthly means match the monthly temperature dataset from the Climatic Research Unit. To this end, daily minimum, maximum, and mean temperatures within one calendar month have been subjected to a correction involving monthly means of the respective month. As these corrections can be largely different for adjacent months, this procedure potentially leads to implausible differences in daily temperatures across the boundaries of calendar months. We analyze day-to-day temperature fluctuations within and across months and find that across-months differences are significantly larger, mostly in the tropics and frigid zones. Average across-months differe...


Meteorologische Zeitschrift | 2016

Probabilistic evaluation of decadal prediction skill regarding Northern Hemisphere winter storms

Tim Kruschke; Henning W. Rust; Christopher Kadow; Wolfgang A. Müller; Holger Pohlmann; Gregor C. Leckebusch; Uwe Ulbrich


Atmospheric Science Letters | 2016

Different long-term trends of extra-tropical cyclones and windstorms in ERA-20C and NOAA-20CR reanalyses

Daniel J. Befort; Simon Wild; Tim Kruschke; Uwe Ulbrich; Gregor C. Leckebusch


Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences | 2015

An approach to build an event set of European wind storms based on ECMWF EPS

Robert Osinski; Philip Lorenz; Tim Kruschke; Max Voigt; Uwe Ulbrich; Gregor C. Leckebusch; Eberhard Faust; Thomas Hofherr; Detlef Majewski


Meteorologische Zeitschrift | 2015

Probabilistic evaluation of decadal predictions of Northern Hemisphere winter storms

Tim Kruschke; Henning W. Rust; Christopher Kadow; Wolfgang A. Mueller; Holger Pohlmann; Gregor C. Leckebusch; Uwe Ulbrich


Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences | 2016

An analysis of uncertainties and skill in forecasts of winter storm losses

Tobias Pardowitz; Robert Osinski; Tim Kruschke; Uwe Ulbrich


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2016

Are we using the right fuel to drive hydrological models? A climate impact study in the Upper Blue Nile

Stefan Liersch; Julia Tecklenburg; Henning W. Rust; Andreas Dobler; Madlen Fischer; Tim Kruschke; Hagen Koch; Fred Hattermann


Atmospheric Science Letters | 2017

Quantifying the extremity of windstorms for regions featuring infrequent events

Michael A. Walz; Tim Kruschke; Henning W. Rust; Uwe Ulbrich; Gregor C. Leckebusch

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Uwe Ulbrich

Free University of Berlin

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Henning W. Rust

Free University of Berlin

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Dominik Renggli

Free University of Berlin

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Markus G. Donat

University of New South Wales

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Andreas Dobler

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Madlen Fischer

Free University of Berlin

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