Xh. Cheng et Jm. Wallace, CLUSTER-ANALYSIS OF THE NORTHERN-HEMISPHERE WINTERTIME 500-HPA HEIGHTFIELD - SPATIAL PATTERNS, Journal of the atmospheric sciences, 50(16), 1993, pp. 2674-2696
Hierarchical cluster analysis based on the method of Ward is performed
on the Northern Hemisphere wintertime 10-day low-pass-filtered 500-hP
a height field, using the NMC operational analyses for the period 1946
-85. Input data are gridded fields at 5-day intervals, a total of 702
maps, each with 445 grid points. The measure of similarity between map
s is the squared height difference, averaged over all grid points; tha
t is, the squared ''distance'' between the maps in multidimensional ph
ase space. The closest two of the 702 maps are merged to form a cluste
r that, in subsequent calculations, replaces the maps from which it wa
s formed. This procedure (modified slightly, to deal with the differin
g numbers of maps in the clusters) is repeated 701 times until all the
maps have been merged to form a single cluster whose centroid corresp
onds to the climatological mean map. The two clusters involved in the
final merger, the pair of smaller clusters that merged to form each of
them, and so on, are represented in terms of a ''family tree'' that i
s traced back to the point where the clusters become too small to be o
f practical interest. The reproducibility of the larger clusters is co
mpared by seeing how well various ones are replicated when the analysi
s is repeated on randomly chosen halves of the dataset in an ensemble
of 50 runs. The three most reproducible clusters, which together accou
nt for approximately 1/3 of the 702 maps in the dataset, can be recons
tructed remarkably well from linear combinations of the two leading EO
Fs of the covariance matrix. They are related to features of the proba
bility density function (PDF) in a two-dimensional phase space defined
by the.expansion coefficients of these EOFs. One is marked by a close
d anticyclone over the southern tip of Greenland, one by a ridge over
the Gulf of Alaska and one by a ridge over the Rockies. In comparison
to other clusters of comparable size, their centroids are conspicuousl
y far from the climatological mean map. Positive 500-hPa height anomal
ies in excess of 200 m are observed in association with the first two
clusters, over regions of large variance and strong positive skewness
of the 500-hPa height field. Occurrences of these two clusters have of
ten been marked by extreme cold over parts of North America. Similar c
lusters are obtained when the analysis is performed on the Pacific/Nor
th American and Atlantic/European sectors of the hemisphere. The resul
ts are compared with those obtained in other studies, based on a varie
ty of analysis techniques.