Observed tropical cyclone-driven cold wakes in the context of rapid warming of the Arabian Sea

Journal of Operational Oceanography Taylor & Francis 16:3 (2023) 236-251

Authors:

RS Akhila, J Kuttippurath, B Balan Sarojini, A Chakraborty, R Rahul

Superdeterminism Without Conspiracy

ArXiv 2308.11262 (2023)

Validation of boreal summer tropical鈥揺xtratropical causal links in seasonal forecasts

Weather and Climate Dynamics Copernicus Publications 4:3 (2023) 701-723

Authors:

Giorgia Di Capua, Dim Coumou, Bart van den Jurk, Antje Weisheimer, Andrew Turner, Reik Donner

Abstract:

Much of the forecast skill in the mid-latitudes on seasonal timescales originates from deep convection in the tropical belt. For boreal summer, such tropical鈥揺xtratropical teleconnections are less well understood compared to winter. Here we validate the representation of boreal summer tropical鈥揺xtratropical teleconnections in a general circulation model in comparison with observational data. To characterise variability between tropical convective activity and mid-latitude circulation, we identify the South Asian monsoon (SAM)鈥揷ircumglobal teleconnection (CGT) pattern and the western North Pacific summer monsoon (WNPSM)鈥揘orth Pacific high (NPH) pairs as the leading modes of tropical鈥揺xtratropical coupled variability in both reanalysis (ERA5) and seasonal forecast (SEAS5) data. We calculate causal maps based on the Peter and Clark momentary conditional independence (PCMCI) causal discovery algorithm, which identifies causal links in a 2D field, to show the causal effect of each of these patterns on circulation and convection in the Northern Hemisphere. The spatial patterns and signs of the causal links in SEAS5 closely resemble those seen in ERA5, independent of the initialisation date of SEAS5. By performing a subsampling experiment (over time), we analyse the strengths of causal links in SEAS5 and show that they are qualitatively weaker than those in ERA5. We identify those regions for which SEAS5 data well reproduce ERA5 values, e.g. the southeastern USA, and highlight those where the bias is more prominent, e.g. North Africa and in general tropical regions. We demonstrate that different El Ni帽o鈥揝outhern Oscillation phases have only a marginal effect on the strength of these links. Finally, we discuss the potential role of model mean-state biases in explaining differences between SEAS5 and ERA5 causal links.

Measurements of the mean structure, temperature, and circulation of the MLT

Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society American Astronomical Society 55:3 (2023) 371

Authors:

Anne K Smith, Colby Brabec, Jorge Chau, Xinzhao Chu, Bernd Funke, V Lynn Harvey, McArthur Jones Jr., Aimee Merkel, Steven Miller, Martin Mlynczak, Scott Osprey, Doug Rowland, Jia Yue

Abstract:

The mean state of the MLT (mesosphere 鈥 lower thermosphere) is key in the exchange of energy, momentum, and trace species between the middle and upper atmosphere. Knowledge of the mean state wind and temperature is endangered by an upcoming gap in measurements. Needed actions include continued operation of existing space-borne instruments and rapid development of replacement options.

Understanding the mechanisms for tropical surface impacts of the quasi鈥恇iennial oscillation (QBO)

Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres Wiley 128:15 (2023) e2023JD038474

Authors:

Jorge L Garc铆a鈥怓ranco, Lesley J Gray, Scott Osprey, Aleena M Jaison, Robin Chadwick, Jonathan Lin

Abstract:

The impact of the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) on tropical convection and precipitation is investigated through nudging experiments using the UK Met Office Hadley Center Unified Model. The model control simulations show robust links between the internally generated QBO and tropical precipitation and circulation. The model zonal wind in the tropical stratosphere was nudged above 90 hPa in atmosphere-only and coupled ocean-atmosphere configurations. The convection and precipitation in the atmosphere-only simulations do not differ between the experiments with and without nudging, which may indicate that SST-convection coupling is needed for any QBO influence on the tropical lower troposphere and surface. In the coupled experiments, the precipitation and sea-surface temperature relationships with the QBO phase disappear when nudging is applied. Imposing a realistic QBO-driven static stability anomaly in the upper-troposphere lower-stratosphere is not sufficient to simulate tropical surface impacts. The nudging reduced the influence of the lower troposphere on the upper branch of the Walker circulation, irrespective of the QBO, indicating that the upper tropospheric zonal circulation has been decoupled from the surface by the nudging. These results suggest that grid-point nudging mutes relevant feedback processes occurring at the tropopause level, including high cloud radiative effects and wave mean flow interactions, which may play a key role in stratospheric-tropospheric coupling.