Two leading modes of wintertime atmospheric circulation drive the recent warm Arctic-cold Eurasia temperature pattern Two leading modes of wintertime atmospheric circulation drive the recent warm Arctic-cold Eurasia temperature pattern

Journal of Climate American Meteorological Society 33:13 (2019) 5565-5587

Authors:

Kunhui Ye, Gabriele Messori

Assessing external and internal sources of Atlantic Multidecadal Variability using models, proxy data, and early instrumental indices

Journal of Climate American Meteorological Society 32 (2019) 7727-7745

Authors:

Christopher O'Reilly, L Zanna, T Woollings

Abstract:

Atlantic multidecadal variability (AMV) of sea surface temperature exhibits an important influence on the climate of surrounding continents. It remains unclear, however, the extent to which AMV is due to internal climate variability (e.g., ocean circulation variability) or changes in external forcing (e.g., volcanic/anthropogenic aerosols or greenhouse gases). Here, the sources of AMV are examined over a 340-yr period using proxy indices, instrumental data, and output from the Last Millennium Ensemble (LME) simulation. The proxy AMV closely follows the accumulated atmospheric forcing from the instrumental North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) reconstruction (r = 0.65)鈥攁n 鈥渋nternal鈥 source of AMV. This result provides strong observational evidence that much of the AMV is generated through the oceanic response to atmospheric circulation forcing, as previously demonstrated in targeted modeling studies. In the LME there is a substantial externally forced AMV component, which exhibits a modest but significant correlation with the proxy AMV (i.e., r = 0.37), implying that at least 13% of the AMV is externally forced. In the LME simulations, however, the AMV response to accumulated NAO forcing is weaker than in the proxy/observational datasets. This weak response is possibly related to the decadal NAO variability, which is substantially weaker in the LME than in observations. The externally forced component in the proxy AMV is also related to the accumulated NAO forcing, unlike in the LME. This indicates that the external forcing is likely influencing the AMV through different mechanistic pathways: via changes in radiative forcing in the LME and via changes in atmospheric circulation in the observational/proxy record.

The connection between the Southern Annular Mode and a feature-based perspective on Southern Hemisphere mid-latitude winter variability

Journal of Climate American Meteorological Society (2019) JCLI-D-19-0224.1

Authors:

Clemens Spensberger, Michael J Reeder, Thomas Spengler, Matthew Patterson

Dynamics of ITCZ width: Ekman processes, non-Ekman processes and links to sea-surface temperature Dynamics of ITCZ width: Ekman processes, non-Ekman processes and links to sea-surface temperature

Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences American Meteorological Society 76:9 (2019) 2869-2884

Authors:

Michael P Byrne, Rhidian Thomas

Seasonal predictability of the winter North Atlantic Oscillation from a jet stream perspective

Geophysical Research Letters Wiley 46:16 (2019) 10159-10167

Authors:

Tess Parker, Tim Woollings, Antje Weisheimer, Chris O'Reilly, L Baker, L Shaffrey

Abstract:

The winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) has varied on interannual and decadal timescales over the last century, associated with variations in the speed and latitude of the eddy driven jet stream. This paper uses hindcasts from two operational seasonal forecast sys tems (the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF)鈥檚 seasonal forecast system, and the UK Met Office global seasonal forecast system) and a century long atmosphere-only experiment (using the ECMWF鈥檚 Integrated Forecasting System model) to relate seasonal prediction skill in the NAO to these aspects of jet variability. This shows that the NAO skill realised so far arises from interannual variations in the jet, largely associated with its latitude rather than speed. There likely remains further potential for predictability on longer, decadal timescales. In the small sample of mod els analysed here, improved representation of the structure of jet variability does not trans late to enhanced seasonal forecast skill.