Dynamic and Thermodynamic Control of the Response of Winter Climate and Extreme Weather to Projected Arctic Sea鈥怚ce Loss
Geophysical Research Letters Wiley Open Access 51:13 (2024) e2024GL109271
Abstract:
A novel sub鈥恠ampling method has been used to isolate the dynamic effects of the response of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and the Siberian High (SH) from the total response to projected Arctic sea鈥恑ce loss under 2掳C global warming above preindustrial levels in very large initial鈥恈ondition ensemble climate simulations. Thermodynamic effects of Arctic warming are more prominent in Europe while dynamic effects are more prominent in Asia/East Asia. This explains less鈥恠evere cold extremes in Europe but more鈥恠evere cold extremes in Asia/East Asia. For Northern Eurasia, dynamic effects overwhelm the effect of increased moisture from a warming Arctic, leading to an overall decrease in precipitation. We show that the response scales linearly with the dynamic response. However, caution is needed when interpreting inter鈥恗odel differences in the response because of internal variability, which can largely explain the inter鈥恗odel spread in the NAO and SH response in the Polar Amplification Model Intercomparison Project.Multi-decadal skill variability in predicting the spatial patterns of ENSO events
Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union 51:12 (2024) e2023GL107971
Abstract:
Seasonal hindcasts have previously been demonstrated to show multi-decadal variability in skill across the twentieth century in indices describing El-Ni帽o Southern Oscillation (ENSO), which drives global seasonal predictability. Here, we analyze the skill of predicting ENSO events' magnitude and spatial pattern, in the CSF-20C coupled seasonal hindcasts in 1901鈥2010. We find minima in the skill of predicting the first (in 1930鈥1950) and second (in 1940鈥1960) principal components of sea-surface temperature (SST) in the tropical Pacific. This minimum is also present in the spatial correlation of SSTs, in 1930鈥1960. The skill reduction is explained by lower ENSO magnitude and variance in 1930鈥1960, as well as decreased SST persistence. The SST skill minima project onto surface winds, leading to worse predictions in coupled hindcasts compared to hindcasts using prescribed SSTs. Questions remain about the offset between the first and second principal components' skill minima, and how the skill minima impact the extra-tropics.Multi鈥怐ecadal Skill Variability in Predicting the Spatial Patterns of ENSO Events
Geophysical Research Letters Wiley Open Access 51:12 (2024) e2023GL107971
Abstract:
Seasonal hindcasts have previously been demonstrated to show multi鈥恉ecadal variability in skill across the twentieth century in indices describing El鈥怤i帽o Southern Oscillation (ENSO), which drives global seasonal predictability. Here, we analyze the skill of predicting ENSO events' magnitude and spatial pattern, in the CSF鈥20C coupled seasonal hindcasts in 1901鈥2010. We find minima in the skill of predicting the first (in 1930鈥1950) and second (in 1940鈥1960) principal components of sea鈥恠urface temperature (SST) in the tropical Pacific. This minimum is also present in the spatial correlation of SSTs, in 1930鈥1960. The skill reduction is explained by lower ENSO magnitude and variance in 1930鈥1960, as well as decreased SST persistence. The SST skill minima project onto surface winds, leading to worse predictions in coupled hindcasts compared to hindcasts using prescribed SSTs. Questions remain about the offset between the first and second principal components' skill minima, and how the skill minima impact the extra鈥恡ropics.Advancing Organized Convection Representation in the Unified Model: Implementing and Enhancing Multiscale Coherent Structure Parameterization
(2024)
Asymmetric hysteresis response of midlatitude storm tracks to CO2 removal
Nature Climate Change Springer Nature 14:5 (2024) 496-503