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Role of Eurasian Snow Cover in Linking Winter‐Spring Eurasian Coldness to the Autumn Arctic Sea Ice Retreat
Author(s) -
Zhang Ruonan,
Sun Chenghu,
Zhang Renhe,
Li Weijing,
Zuo Jinqing
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2019jd030339
Subject(s) - climatology , middle latitudes , snow , trough (economics) , arctic ice pack , arctic oscillation , sea ice , arctic , atmospheric sciences , teleconnection , geology , ridge , siberian high , environmental science , east asia , oceanography , northern hemisphere , geography , geomorphology , paleontology , el niño southern oscillation , archaeology , china , economics , macroeconomics
Abstract An anomalous “north‐south” dipole mode of the snow water equivalent (SWE) persisting from winter to spring is detected over the Eurasian mid‐to‐high latitudes in this study. Using observational data sets and numerical experiments of the Community Atmospheric Model (5.0), we show that this mode contributes to prolonged winter‐springtime coldness in midlatitude Eurasia and is closely linked to the declining November Arctic sea ice concentration. The decline in the sea ice concentration over the Barents‐Laptev Seas can induce a teleconnection pattern over the mid‐to‐high latitudes in the following winter, accompanied by an anomalous ridge over the Ural Mountains and an anomalous trough over Europe and East Asia. Such changes in the large‐scale circulation lead to more cold surges and heavy snowfall in the midlatitudes and light snowfall in the high latitudes, forming an anomalous north‐south dipole mode of the SWE, which further reduces the temperature through thermodynamic feedback. Due to seasonal memory, this SWE pattern can persist into the following spring and can lead to springtime midlatitude coldness via thermodynamic and dynamic processes. For the thermodynamic process, the anomalous SWE condition can lead to anomalous wet soil, reduced incoming surface solar radiation, and cooling air in the midlatitudes. This phenomenon induces an enhanced Siberian High and a deepened East Asian trough via the snow‐Siberian high‐feedback mechanism, which favors a cold spring in northern East Asia. Further analysis suggests that an empirical seasonal prediction model based on the SWE can reasonably predict East Asian spring temperature anomalies.