Impacts of Autumn Arctic Sea Ice Concentration Changes on the East Asian Winter Monsoon Variability
Author(s) -
Zhang Chen,
Renguang Wu,
Wen Chen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of climate
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.315
H-Index - 287
eISSN - 1520-0442
pISSN - 0894-8755
DOI - 10.1175/jcli-d-13-00731.1
Subject(s) - climatology , arctic , arctic geoengineering , arctic ice pack , arctic oscillation , arctic dipole anomaly , arctic sea ice decline , middle latitudes , geology , siberian high , sea ice , east asia , east asian monsoon , environmental science , atmospheric circulation , jet stream , atmospheric sciences , monsoon , oceanography , antarctic sea ice , geography , northern hemisphere , jet (fluid) , physics , archaeology , china , thermodynamics
The present study investigated the impacts of autumn Arctic sea ice concentration (SIC) changes on the East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) and associated climate and circulation on the interannual time scale. It is found that the Arctic SIC anomalies have little impact on the southern mode of EAWM, but the northern mode is significantly associated with both western and eastern Arctic SIC anomalies. When there is less (more) SIC in eastern (western) Arctic, the EAWM tends to be stronger. The concurrent surface air temperatureanomaliesareinducedbothlocallyduetothedirecteffectoficecoverandin remoteregionsthrough anomalous wind advection. Analysis showed that eastern Arctic SIC anomalies have a larger effect on local atmospheric stability of the lower troposphere than western Arctic SIC anomalies. Winter temperature over the midlatitudes of East Asia is lower when there is more (less) SIC in the western (eastern) Arctic. The atmospheric response to the Arctic SIC anomalies is dominantly barotropic in autumn, and changes to baroclinic over the midlatitudes of Asia, but remains barotropic in other regions in winter. The mid- to highlatitude circulation systems, including the Siberian high, the East Asian trough, and the East Asian westerly jet stream, play important roles in connecting autumn Arctic SIC anomalies and the northern mode of the EAWM variability. No obvious concurrent sea surface temperature anomalies accompany Arctic SIC variations on the interannual time scale, indicating that the Arctic SIC anomalies have independent impacts on the East Asian winter climate.
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