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DOI

MiLES v0.8

Mid-Latitude Evaluation System

Oct 2014 - Jan 2021

by P. Davini (CNR-ISAC, p.davini@isac.cnr.it)

Acknowledgements to: G. Di Capua (PIK), J. von Hardenberg (CNR-ISAC), I. Mavilia (CNR-ISAC), E. Arnone (University of Torino)


WHAT IS MiLES?

MiLES is a diagnostic suite based on R and CDO aimed at estimating the properties of Northern Hemisphere mid-latitude climate variability in Global Climate Models and Reanalysis datasets. It has been originally thought for EC-Earth GCM output and then it has been extended to any model or Reanalysis datasets. It relies only daily 500hPa Northern Hemisphere geopotential height data and produces NetCDF4 outputs and climatological figures over the chosen time period and season. Before performing analysis, data are preprocessed and interpolated on a common 2.5x2.5 grid using CDO.
Model data can be compared against ECMWF ERA-Interim Reanalysis over a standard period (1979-2017) or with any other MiLES-generated data.

Current version includes:

  1. 1D Atmospheric Blocking: Tibaldi and Molteni (1990) index for Northern Hemisphere. Computed at fixed latitude of 60N, with delta of -5,-2.5,0,2.5,5 deg, fiN=80N and fiS=40N. Full timeseries and climatologies are provided in NetCDF4 Zip format.

  2. 2D Atmospheric blocking: following the index by Davini et al. (2012). It is a 2D version of Tibaldi and Molteni (1990) for Northern Hemisphere atmospheric blocking evaluating meridional gradient reversal at 500hPa. It includes also Meridional Gradient Index and Blocking Intensity index and Rossby wave orientation index, computing both Instantenous Blocking and Blocking Events frequency. Blocking Events definition allows the estimation of the blocking duration. A supplementary Instantaneous Blocking index with the GHGS2 conditon is also evaluted. Full timeseries and climatologies are provided in NetCDF4 Zip format.

  3. Z500 Empirical Orthogonal Functions: Based on EOFs computed by R using Singular Value Decomposition. First 4 EOFs for North Atlantic (over the 90W-40E, 20N-85N box), North Pacific (140E-80W, 20N-85N) and Northern Hemisphere (20N-85N) can be computed Figures showing linear regression of PCs on monthly Z500 are provided. PCs and eigenvectors, as well as the variances explained are provided in NetCDF4 Zip format.

  4. North Atlantic Weather Regimes: following k-means clustering of 500hPa geopotential height. 4 weather regimes over North Atlantic (80W-40E 30N-87.5N) are evaluted using anomalies from daily seasonal cycle. North Atlantic first EOFs (retaining the 80% of variance) are computed to reduce the phase-space dimension and then k-means clustering using Hartigan-Wong algorithm with k=4 is computed. Cluster assignment is performed analyzing positions of absolute minima and maxima. Figures report patterns, regimes assignation and frequencies of occurrence. NetCDF4 Zip data are saved. Only 4 regimes and DJF season is supported so far.

  5. Meandering Index : following the index introduced by Di Capua and Coumou (2016). It evaluates the waviness of the atmosphere (i.e. the length of the longest isopleth) at a reference latitude of 60N. Original code can be found at https://github.com/giorgiadicapua/MeanderingIndex. NetCDF4 Zip data are saved but no figures are provided.


MAIN NOTES & REFERENCES

Be aware that this is a free scientific tool in continous development, then it may not be free of bugs. Please report any issue on the GitHub portal.

Please cite MiLES in your publication: "P. Davini, 2018: MiLES - Mid Latitude Evaluation System. Zenodo. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1237837". If you want to cite a specific version of check on Zenodo which DOI to use. Extra references to specific indices are:

a). "Tibaldi S. and Molteni F. 1990. On the operational predictability of blocking. Tellus A 42(3): 343–365, doi:10.1034/j.1600-0870.1990.t01-2-00003.x." in case you use the 1D blocking index.

b). "Davini P., C. Cagnazzo, S. Gualdi, and A. Navarra, 2012: Bidimensional Diagnostics, Variability, and Trends of Northern Hemisphere Blocking. J. Climate, 25, 6496–6509, doi: 10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00032.1." in case you use the 2D blocking index.

c). "Di Capua G. and Coumou D. 2016: Changes in meandering of the Northern Hemisphere circulation. Environ. Res. Lett. 11 (2016) 094028 doi:10.1088/1748-9326/11/9/094028" in case you use the Meandering Index.

MiLES v0.6 has been also included in the ESMValTool Package.


SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS

  • a. R version > 3.0
  • b. CDO version > 1.6.5 (1.8 at least for complete GRIB support), compiled with netCDF4
  • c. Compiling environment (gcc)

IMPORTANT: there are 5 R packages (ncdf4, maps, PCICt, akima and mapproj) currently needed to run MiLES. You have to run Rscript config/installpack.R as first step in order to install the packages. If everything runs fine, their installation is performed by an automated routine that brings the user through the standard web-based installation. Packages are also included in MiLES and can be installed offline setting web=0 in the script.

  • ncdf4 provides the interface for NetCDF files.
  • maps provides the world maps for the plots (version >= 3.0 )
  • PCICt provides the tools to handle 360-days and 365-days calendars (from model data).
  • akima provides the interpolation for map projections.
  • mapproj provides a series of map projection that can be used.

If you are aware of other way to implement this 5 passages without using those packages, please contact me.


HOW TO

Configuration

Before running MiLES the 5 above-mentioned R packages should installed.

Two configuration scripts control the program options:

  1. config/config_$MACHINE.sh controls the properties of your environment. It should be set accordingly to your local configuration. Two template .tmpl files for Unix and Mac Os X machines are provided. It is a trivial configuration, needing only information on CDO/R paths and some folders definition. IMPORTANT: this file also includes the directory tree for NetCDF data files and the expected input files format. It's extremely important that you create OUR OWN config file: in this way it will not be overwritten by further pull.
  2. config/R_config.R controls the plot properties. If everything is ok, you should not touch this file. However, from here you can change in the properties of the plots (as figure size, palettes, axis font, etc.). Also output file format and map projection can be specified here if you do not use the wrapper (see later). Figures are extremely basic: they can be produced in pdf, png and eps format.

Running with the wrapper

The simplest way to run MiLES is executing in bash environment ./wrapper_miles.sh namelist.sh. Options as datasets, projects, experiment, ensemble, seasons, which EOFs compute, reference dataset or file output format as well as the map projection to use can specified since v0.7 through the namelists. Here below a list of the variables that can be set up

Key variables

  • machine -> the name of the configuration file of your local machine.
  • project_exp -> a project identifier, e.g. CMIP5 (unset if you do not want to use it).
  • dataset_exp -> identifier for the dataset used to create files and paths structure (mandatory!)
  • expid_exp -> identifier for the experiment type used to create files and paths structure (unset if you do not want to use it)
  • ens_exp -> identifier for the ensemble members used to create files and paths structure (unset if you do not want to use it). IMPORTANT: the three above-mentioned vars are the core of the CMIP-like data structure and they have been introduced to this aim.
  • year1_exp and year2_exp -> the years on which MiLES will run.
  • std_clim -> can be true to use standard ERAI 1979-2017 climatology, false for custom comparison.
  • seasons -> specify one or more of the 4 standard seasons using 3 characters (DJF-MAM-JJA-SON). Use ALL to cover the full year. Otherwise, use 3 character for each month divided by an underscore to create your own season (e.g. Jan_Feb_Mar_Apr).
  • project_ref,dataset_ref, expid_ref, ens_ref, year1_ref and year2_ref -> in analogy to the main variables, these controls the experiment to be compared when std_clim=false is set.

Config options

Since v0.7 a configuration options system has been introduced. Adding specific keywords to the options variable will provide different results: you can set block for blocking, eofs for EOFs, figures for having figures and so on. See the namelist.tmpl for the full description of the options.

Secondary variables

  • teles -> A list of one or teleconnection patterns. NAO,PNA or AO for standard EOFs over North Atlantic, North Pacific and Northern Hemisphere respectively. Custorm regions can be specifieds as lon1_lon2_lat1_lat2.
  • output_file_type -> pdf, eps or png figures format (pdf is default).
  • map_projection -> set no for standard plot (fast). Use azequalarea for polar plots (default). All projection from mapproj R package are supported (but not all of them have been tested).
  • varname and level -> do not change these: this changes the variables the pre-processor will extract and analyse.

MiLES scripts

The chain of scripts will be executed by the wrapper. However, each MiLES script can be run autonomously from command line providing the correct sequence of arguments. R-based scripts are written as R functions and thus can be called inside R if needed.

  • assimilate.sh. MiLES is based on a pre-processing of data. This script expects geopotential height data (daily or higher frequency) in a single folder: from v0.5 it is able to identify 500hPa data among other levels. Since v0.7 replaces the older z500_prepare.sh since it is thought to work also on other type of data. The code interpolates data on a 2.5x2.5 grid, performs daily averaging and selects the NH only. Most importantly, it organizes the data structure in order to make it handable by MiLES. It produces a single NetCDF4 Zip files with all the data available. A check is performed in order to avoid useless run of the script: if your file is corrupted you can use the doforcedata flags to overwrite it. You can use both geopotential or geopotential height data, the former will be automatically converted. To simplify the analysis by R, the CDO -a is used to set an absolute time axis in the data.

  • eof_fast.R and eof_figures.R. EOFs are computed using Singular Value Decompositon (SVD) R function by the former script, while the latter provides the figures. EOFs signs for the main EOFs are checked in order to maintain consistency with the reference dataset.

  • blocking_fast.R and blocking_figures.R. Blocking analysis is performed by the first R script. The second provides the figures. Both the Davini et al. (2012) and the Tibaldi and Molteni (1990) blocking index are computed and plotted by these scripts, as well a wide set of related dignostics. See Davini et al. (2012) for more details. Since v0.7 u500_block.R is included for a beta computation of blocking from zonal wind at 500hPa.

  • regimes_fast.R and regimes_figures.R. North Atlntic weather regimes analysis is performed by the first R script. Weather regimes assignation is performed using spatial positioning of maxima and minima, saving all to NetCDF data. The second script provides the figures.

  • meandering_fast.R. It computes the Meandering Index following the Di Capua and Coumou (2016). No figures are yet provided.

  • extra_figures_block.R. This is not called by the wrapper and it provides extra statistics, comparing several experiments with ensemble means, histogram for specific region and Taylor diagrams.

Execution times

MiLES is pretty fast: on iMac 2017 (MacOS High Sierra 10.13, 3.4 GHz Intel Core i5, 16GB DDR4) 30 years of analysis for a single season takes about (test on v0.7):

  • EOFs: 18 seconds
  • Blocking: 62 seconds
  • Regimes: 30 seconds
  • Meandering: 175 seconds
  • Figures (together): 20 seconds

Please be aware that issues may arise with large datasets (i.e. larger than 100 years) where the single file approach may be problematic. It is recommended in such cases to split the analysis in different subsets.


HISTORY

next version - no target

  • support for 1.25x1.25 grid (r288x145)
  • Expanding possibilities for ncdf.opener.universal()
  • Revisiting blocking tracking in order to apply it on all the indices (three files are now produced)
  • Introduce the "bias corrected" blocking with bcblock option
  • Adding D'Andrea et al. 1998 1D index
  • Removing 10-day blocking events
  • Vectorise the whole block.miles.fast() function
  • Introduce the dependency to abind package

v0.7 - Feb 2019

  • New wrapper structure using namelists
  • Introducing blocking diagnostic based on zonal wind at 500hPa (beta)
  • Introducing blocking diagnostic based on Schwierz et al. (2004) (beta)
  • Generalized pre-processor for data assimilation (assimilate.sh)
  • Improvement in the ncdf.opener.universal() function (now working with several relative time axes)
  • Introuction of the project variable and the has_config() function to control flags
  • Rolling back to CDO bilinear interpolation to allow extrapolation
  • Setting up a CDO fillmiss operator to fix possible missing points
  • Fixed bug in season2timeseason() selection (that was failing with long char names)
  • Fixed bug in power.date.new() (that was affecting Blocking Events calculation)
  • Refactored NetCDF output writer with ncdf.writer() and ncdf.defdims() functions
  • NetCDF output has now a fixed reference time (1850-01-01)
  • Reformatting MiLES code according to standards (using styler package): some linters still failing
  • Fixed bug in daily.anom.running.mean5() (that was mixing up the seasonal cycle)
  • Fixed bug in NetCDF output for EOFs (that was avoiding CDO readability)
  • Fixed bug in ncdf.opener.universal() that was limiting the reading of 360-day calendar
  • Faster and generalized flipper() and rotation() functions

v0.6 - Aug 2018

  • Introducing the Meandering Index from Di Capua and Coumou (2016)
  • CMIP-like (dataset+experiment+ensemble member) data structure is introduced, allowing also for experiment type definition
  • Minor updates to the functions variables names, structure and layout
  • Packages update
  • Support for cross-dateline EOFs (beta)

v0.51 - Apr 2018

  • Consolidation of weather regimes functions (shift to variance minimum)
  • Improved cluster name assignation
  • Improved Netcdf conventions for output files
  • Rewritten ncdf.opener function

v0.5 - Mar 2018

  • Able to detect 500hPa level inside of any geopotential height data
  • Improved wrapper with flags to control each section
  • Frequency is again plotted on regimes
  • Various bug fixing and consolidation
  • Improved climatologies (ERAI 1979-2017)

v0.43 - Feb 2018

  • R-based EOFs script consistent with the MiLES structure
  • Rearrange structure of wrapper and config file: now $INDIR is defined in config files (increase portability!)
  • Beta support for free month and season selection
  • Consistent ensemble members support
  • Various bug fixing for NetCDF access
  • Improved functions to control path and folders for NetCDF and figures
  • Faster daily anomalies computation for weather regimes script
  • Variance is again plotted for EOFs
  • Template files are provided for Unix and Mac Os X machines

v0.42 - Dec 2017

  • Inclusion of extra blocking diagnostics (Taylor diagrams, Duration-Events plots, histograms, etc.)
  • Ensemble mean for blocking outputs
  • Ensemble member support for blocking routine
  • Bug fixing for calendar handling
  • 10-day blocking events as new output
  • ECMWF data structure support
  • Updated climatology (1979-2016)
  • Support for Grib files

v0.41 - Jul 2017

  • Plot bug fixing

v0.4 - June 2017

  • Tibaldi and Molteni (1990) blocking index is now computed by blocking_fast.R
  • Weather regimes based on k-means clustering over North Atlantic is now available.
  • Reformulation of input Z500 files, now based on a single NetCDF file: to handle 360-days and 365-day calendar package PCICt is now required.
  • Polar projection support: requires mapproj and akima packages.
  • Figures updates and various bug fixing.
  • Re-written wrapper to provide dynamic comparison of datasets

v0.31 - May 2017

  • Comparison of EOFs and Blocking figures with any other MiLES-generated dataset.
  • Beta-version of sign-check for main EOFs.
  • Reformulation: each script is made by R function + can be run from command line.
  • Change folder structure to simplify portability.
  • Code consolidation and folder/variable name normalization.

v0.3 - May 2017

  • Blocking Events definition by Davini et al. (2012) now avaiable.
  • Removed dependencies from fields and spam R packages.
  • Support for figures format in png, pdf or eps - by J. von Hardenberg.
  • Removed dependencies on R-files saving blocking data (using now NetCDF).
  • Blocking timeseries available in NetCDF.
  • NetCDF4 Zip for blocking output files.
  • Support for different model calendar: 30-day, Gregorian and No-Leap-Year.
  • ~36x faster linear regression for EOFs (.fit.lm function).
  • new ~2x faster largescale.extension.if() function.
  • Improved speed in blocking for long timeseries: ~2.5x faster for 30years (predeclaration of arrays).
  • Minor bugs in axis legends (removal of image.plot).
  • Readme in markdown format.

v0.2 - Apr 2017

  • Support for Arctic Oscillation.
  • External unique configuration file.
  • Psuedo-universal adaptability to any model data.
  • Automated script for R package installing.
  • Adaptation to geopotential/geopotential height data.
  • Climatological blocking data are stored in NetCDF.
  • Now on GitHUB.

v0.11 - Mar 2015

  • Update to fast blocking (Blocking2-scheme) computation.

v0.1 - Oct 2014

  • EOFs and 2D Blocking calculation.
  • Basic functions implemented.
  • Support for NetCDF4.
  • Support for 4 standard season (DJF,MAM,JJA,SON).
  • ERAINTERIM comparison via netCDF files.
  • Parallelization Z500 extraction.
  • Png outputs from PDF.