Climatology is commonly known as the study of our climate, yet the term encompasses many other important definitions. Climatology is also defined as the long-term average of a given variable, often over time periods of 20-30 years. Climatologies are frequently employed in the atmospheric sciences, and may be computed for a variety of time ranges.
A monthly climatology, for example, will produce a mean value for each month and a daily climatology will produce a mean value for each day, over a specified time range. Anomalies, or the deviation from the mean, are created by subtracting climatological values from observed data.
When seasonal variations are present within a set of data, it often helps to express the data in terms of standardized anomalies. Standardized anomalies, also referred to as normalized anomalies,are calculated by dividing anomalies by the climatological standard deviation. They generally provide more information about the magnitude of the anomalies because influences of dispersion have been removed. It is not necessary that a dataset have a particular distribution to express it in terms of standardized anomalies.
Example: Generate monthly vapor pressure climatologies over world landmasses from Jan 1901 to Dec 1995.
Locate Dataset and Variable |
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Select Domains |
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Manually Generate Periodic Mean Function of the Data (Climatology) |
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View Climatologies |
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Create Climatologies via Shortcut |
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Example: Generate a composite of Oct-Dec seasonal average monthly zonal surface wind anomalies from the 1951-2006 climatology for Oct-Dec El Niño seasons (based upon the Climate Prediction Center definition) during that range of years.
Locate Dataset and Variable |
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Select Domains |
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Calculate the Monthly Zonal Wind Anomalies |
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Calculate 3-Month (Seasonal) Running Averages |
T 3 runningAverage
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Select the Oct-Dec El Niño Seasons to Composite |
T (Oct-Dec) VALUES
T (1951) (1957) (1963) (1965) (1968) (1969) (1972) (1976) (1977) (1982) (1986) (1987) (1991) (1994) (1997) (2002) (2004) (2006) VALUES
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Average Over the Selected Seasons |
[T] average |
Locate Dataset and Variable |
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Select Domains |
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Compute Anomalies | |
Standardize Anomalies |
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View Standardized Anomalies |
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