Do these tenants rent the site then? (Tenets/tenants)
The work is in peer review, hence the absence from the public domain of details of the hypothesized mechanism to which the authors ascribe the Oct./winter correlation.
Here is the posting from the authors last year where they explained how they had to withdraw the downloadable research paper, as it had gone into peer review with a view to publication.
http://forum.meteonetwork.it/meteorologia/150683-opi-october-pattern-index.html
Hence why the domain is not an "official" academic site, but the online equivalent of a sketch on the back of an envelope.
They left us with this extract from the first page of the paper, which explains the correlations, but not, of course, the calculations:
http://www.meteonetwork.it/cronaca-meteo/october-pattern-index-opi-un-nuovo-indice-altamente-predittivo-stagione-invernale
If you're going to have a go at long-range weather outlooks in general, then you have to rely on hindcasting of some kind, as the complexities of all the inputs, outputs and interactions which determine the weather make physical cause-and-effect forecasting impossible. You only have to look at the results from seasonal forecasts based on the outcomes of ensembles of weather models to see that.
So you look for analogues, pattern matches or broad variations from the past and see whether they fit. If they do, then you propose a mechanism to explain them. Then you hope to live for a few hundred years for enough results to come in to see whether you're on the right lines.
So there's always going to be an amateurish and fun element to long-range ideas on weather or climate. There aren't going to be any "theorems", as you put it, though an awful lot of "scientists" out there seem to claim to have them. But that doesn't stop it being a legitimate area of interest imo, as long as people don't treat the ideas put forward as cast-iron scientific theories.
Originally Posted by: some faraway beach