
How do intermittency and simultaneous processes obfuscate the Arctic influence on midlatitude winter extreme weather events?
Author(s) -
James E. Overland,
Thomas J. Ballinger,
Judah Cohen,
Jennifer A. Francis,
Edward Hanna,
Ralf Jaiser,
Baek-Min Kim,
SeongJoong Kim,
Jinro Ukita,
Timo Vihma,
Muyin Wang,
Xiangdong Zhang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
environmental research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.37
H-Index - 124
ISSN - 1748-9326
DOI - 10.1088/1748-9326/abdb5d
Subject(s) - middle latitudes , climatology , arctic geoengineering , arctic , environmental science , arctic sea ice decline , arctic dipole anomaly , sea ice , arctic ice pack , teleconnection , atmospheric circulation , arctic oscillation , jet stream , troposphere , atmospheric sciences , geology , oceanography , jet (fluid) , drift ice , northern hemisphere , physics , el niño southern oscillation , thermodynamics
Pronounced changes in the Arctic environment add a new potential driver of anomalous weather patterns in midlatitudes that affect billions of people. Recent studies of these Arctic/midlatitude weather linkages, however, state inconsistent conclusions. A source of uncertainty arises from the chaotic nature of the atmosphere. Thermodynamic forcing by a rapidly warming Arctic contributes to weather events through changing surface heat fluxes and large-scale temperature and pressure gradients. But internal shifts in atmospheric dynamics—the variability of the location, strength, and character of the jet stream, blocking, and stratospheric polar vortex (SPV)—obscure the direct causes and effects. It is important to understand these associated processes to differentiate Arctic-forced variability from natural variability. For example in early winter, reduced Barents/Kara Seas sea-ice coverage may reinforce existing atmospheric teleconnections between the North Atlantic/Arctic and central Asia, and affect downstream weather in East Asia. Reduced sea ice in the Chukchi Sea can amplify atmospheric ridging of high pressure near Alaska, influencing downstream weather across North America. In late winter southward displacement of the SPV, coupled to the troposphere, leads to weather extremes in Eurasia and North America. Combined tropical and sea ice conditions can modulate the variability of the SPV. Observational evidence for Arctic/midlatitude weather linkages continues to accumulate, along with understanding of connections with pre-existing climate states. Relative to natural atmospheric variability, sea-ice loss alone has played a secondary role in Arctic/midlatitude weather linkages; the full influence of Arctic amplification remains uncertain.