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Lee, Myong-In
UNIST Climate Environment Modeling Lab.
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ENSO phase transition enables prediction of winter North Atlantic Oscillation one year ahead

Author(s)
Kim, KiwookLee, Myong-InScaife, Adam A.Smith, Doug M.
Issued Date
2026-03
DOI
10.1038/s41467-026-70646-2
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/91300
Fulltext
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-70646-2
Citation
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.17, no.1, pp.2588
Abstract
The winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is a dominant mode of climate variability affecting temperature and precipitation across the Northern Hemisphere, yet its prediction at seasonal-to-decadal (S2D) lead times remains challenging. Here, using multi-year hindcasts from a multi-model ensemble initialized on 1 November for 1962-2019, we show that NAO skill one year ahead improves significantly when the El Ni & ntilde;o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) undergoes a phase transition next year. This improvement is linked to the northward propagation of anomalous atmospheric angular momentum, which dynamically organizes the NAO and is captured in reanalysis and models. During ENSO transition years, prediction skill increases with ensemble size, and when more than 10 members are used, the forecasts display the signal-to-noise paradox. These findings highlight the potential for enhanced one-year NAO predictability when ENSO transitions are present and large ensemble sizes are used in S2D prediction systems, given the skillful prediction of ENSO phase transitions at one-year lead times by multi-model ensembles.
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
ISSN
2041-1723
Keyword
ARCTIC OSCILLATIONEL-NINOPREDICTABILITYVARIABILITYPROPAGATIONCIRCULATIONMODENINO-SOUTHERN OSCILLATIONLONG-RANGE PREDICTION

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