The role of Rossby waves in polar weather and climate

Weather and Climate Dynamics Copernicus Publications 4:1 (2023) 61-80

Authors:

Tim Woollings, Camillie Li, Marie Drouard, K Elmestekawy, C Mbengue, Matthew Patterson

Abstract:

Recent Arctic warming has fuelled interest in the weather and climate of the polar regions and how this interacts with lower latitudes. Several interesting theories of polar-midlatitude linkages involve Rossby wave propagation as a key process even though the meridional gradient in planetary vorticity, crucial for these waves, is weak at high latitudes. Here we review some basic theory and suggest that Rossby waves can indeed explain some features of polar variability, especially when relative vorticity gradients are present.

We suggest that large-scale polar flow can be conceptualised as a mix of geostrophic turbulence and Rossby wave propagation, as in the midlatitudes, but with the balance tipped further in favour of turbulent flow. Hence, isolated vortices often dominate but some wavelike features remain. As an example, quasi-stationary or weakly westward-propagating subpolar anomalies emerge from statistical analysis of observed data, and these are consistent with some role for wave propagation. The noted persistence of polar cyclones and anticyclones is attributed in part to the weakened effects of wave dispersion, the mechanism responsible for the decay of midlatitude anomalies in downstream development. We also suggest that the vortex-dominated nature of polar dynamics encourages the emergence of annular mode structures in principal component analyses of extratropical circulation.

Finally, we consider how Rossby waves may be triggered from high latitudes. The linear mechanisms known to balance localised heating at lower latitudes are shown to be less efficient in the polar regions. Instead, we suggest the direct response to sea ice loss often manifests as a heat low, with radiative cooling balancing the heating. If the relative vorticity gradient is favourable this does have the potential to trigger a Rossby wave response, although this will often be weak compared to waves forced from lower latitudes.

Volcanic Ash Density

91̽»¨ (2023)

Authors:

Woon Sing Lau, Roy Gordon Grainger, Taylor Isabelle

Abstract:

Unsieved ash density measurements from 23 unsieved raw ash samples originating from 15 volcanoes, including mass of sample measured with a digital scale and volume measured with a nitrogen gas pycnometer. Data measured in July-August 2022.

Fast and slow subpolar ocean responses to the North Atlantic Oscillation: thermal and dynamical changes

Geophysical Research Letters Wiley 49:24 (2022) e2022GL101480

Authors:

Hemant khatri, Tim Woollings

Abstract:

Climate model hindcasts are analyzed to reveal the impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) on the North Atlantic subpolar ocean, which exhibits variability on seasonal to decadal timescales. The ocean response to a single winter NAO event is separated into fast and slow responses. The fast response persists over winter–spring seasons, during which wind stress and heat flux anomalies associated with the NAO rapidly modify ocean temperatures via changes in Ekman transport and ocean-atmosphere heat exchanges. The slow response persists for 3–4 years, during which overturning and gyre circulations redistribute opposing-signed surface temperature anomalies created by the NAO. This redistribution modifies east-west temperature contrasts altering the meridional heat transport associated with gyres and changing the strength of the overturning circulation. Hence, the fast and slow responses lead to opposing-signed subpolar temperature anomalies in time from the competing effects of local forcing and horizontal heat convergence.

The Impact of Turbulent Vertical Mixing in the Venus Clouds on Chemical Tracers

ArXiv 2210.0924 (2022)

Authors:

Maxence Lefèvre, Emmanuel Marcq, Franck Lefèvre

Venus boundary layer dynamics: eolian transport and convective vortex

ArXiv 2210.09219 (2022)