139 research outputs found
Revisiting the possible links between the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation and the Indian summer monsoon using NCEP R-2 and CMAP fields
International audienceIn the past the stratospheric Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO) has sometimes been proposed toexplain the tendency for the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) to alternate between strong andweak years. In this study, NCEP Reanalysis-2 and CMAP fields are statistically analyzed toassess the relationship between equatorial zonal winds in the stratosphere and ISM. In a firststep, it is shown that zonal winds at 15hPa during the preceding winter (January-February) arethe best stratospheric predictor of the summer rainfall over the Indian subcontinent as a whole.This relationship mainly holds for August and September, or the late ISM. Surprisingly, theQBO pattern is not significantly associated with the rainfall variability during June-July or theearly ISM. CMAP and NCEP R-2 fields corroborate these findings and show that westerlyQBO years are associated with a deepening of the monsoon trough over the Gangetic plainsand decreased convective activity in the eastern equatorial Indian region. However, furtherstatistical analysis shows that the QBO-ISM link is complex since a westerly QBO phase at 15hPa in boreal winter leads to a weaker monsoon surface circulation with, in particular, aweakening of the Somali Jet at the beginning of the monsoon, but a much stronger circulationin September. At that time, the Tibetan High is reinforced, the tropical easterly jet at 200 hPa isstronger over India and the local reversed Hadley circulation is also strengthened north of theequator. The mechanisms by which the QBO may affect ISM have been explored through inparticular correlations between stratospheric winds and tropopause temperature and pressurefields. Our results provide support for an out of phase behavior of convective activity betweenthe Indian sub-continent and the equatorial Indian Ocean induced by the QBO phase, especiallyduring the late ISM. During a westerly QBO phase, convective activity is, in September,enhanced over India, which brings higher precipitation, compared to the east phase. This work also suggests that the winter QBO at 15 hPa could have some skill in foreshadowing the late ISM
Polar Low Workshop Summary
The 13th European Polar Low Workshop was organized by the European Polar Low Working Group (www.uni-trier.de/index.php?id=20308)and gathered scientists from nine countries focusing on polar mesocyclones in both hemispheres and other mesoscale weather phenomena such as katabatic winds, tip jets, boundary layer fronts, cold air outbreaks, and weather extremes in polar regions. Topics included experimental, climatological, theoretical, modeling, and remote sensing studies. The aim was to bring together scientists and forecasters to present their latest work and recent findings on these topics and to encourage discussions on improving forecasting and understanding of these phenomena
Polar Low Workshop
The workshop on polar lows (PLs) and mesoscale
weather extremes attracted 30 scientists from
China, France, Germany, Japan, Norway, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States to present the most recent findings on PL research and to summarize our present understanding of PLs and mesocyclones (MCs) as well as mesoscale weather extremes in the Arctic and Antarctic (see sidebar for the definition of PLs). The workshop had the following main themes: PL studies using satellite data and in situ observations, climatological aspects, PLs in reanalyses and model simulations, environments for PL genesis and operational aspects, polar mesoscale weather phenomena, and airâoceanâice interactions. The workshop was concluded by a roundtable discussion resulting in recommendations for future research and actions
Convection and precipitation in the Southern Amazon region: Comparison between a normal and dry year
We examine the diurnal cycles of deep convection and precipitation in the Southern Amazon region, using mainly the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit, contrasting a year of drought (2004-2005) with a ânormalâ year (2005-2006). MODIS 550nm aerosol optical thickness data and TRMM 3B42 precipitation products were also used to investigate whether a significant relationship between these two parameters can be identified. We use a simple, tractable method to identify convective areas based on humidity channels of AMSU. We found through comparisons with independent ground precipitation data that the diurnal cycle of convection in regional scale can be realistically described by this method. We observe that deep convective areas have a slow build-up early in the rainy season of the dry year, and rapid in the normal year, and in both cases, convection starts around midday. As the rainy season advances, the peak hour of maximum convective activity shifts towards mid-afternoon, and eventually spreads towards the night. During the peak of rainy season (December through February) convective activity was up to 12% larger in the ânormalâ year. Convective overshooting was found to be 50% less frequent in the drought year compared to the following year. A simple spatial correlation analysis of MODIS 550nm and TRMM 3B42 monthly mean data show d that by the end of dry season, aerosol loading and precipitation amounts have a positive (albeit low) significant correlation
Contribution of stratospheric warmings to temperature trends in the middle atmosphere from the lidar series obtained at Haute-Provence Observatory (44°N)
International audienceThis study describes a method to calculate long-term temperature trends, as an alternative to the ones based on monthly mean temperatures, which are highly impacted by the high winter variability partially due to wave-mean flow interactions like Sudden Stratospheric Warmings (SSW). This method avoids the strong influence of SSWs and provides "background" temperature trend estimates which are in better agreement with expected direct radiative effects. The data set used results from lidar measurements - performed above southern France continuously since late 1978 - combined with radiosonde profiles. With this new methodology, the long-term trends during winter at 40 km shows a larger cooling per decade (â2 ± 0.4 K) than when the mean temperature is used (â0.4 ± 0.4 K). The background temperature trend is closer to the summer trend estimates which are similar whatever the temperature proxy used, due to the absence of SSWs (â2.9 ± 0.3 K per decade with the mean-based method and â3.4 ± 0.3 K per decade with the background-based calculation). Based on this background temperature, composite evolutions of winter anomalies for both vortex-displacement and vortex-splitting major SSWs have been displayed: in both cases the largest warming occurs at the time of the SSW in the upper stratosphere, with mean amplitudes of more than 10 K. A warm signal in the upper mesosphere could suggest a potential precursory role of gravity waves. Displacement-type events present an 18-day periodicity, which is a clear sign of the wave number one Rossby wave. Colder tropospheric temperatures are noticed before and during the SSW, and warmer ones after the event, with a stronger signal for split-type events
The role of convective overshooting clouds in tropical stratosphere-troposphere dynamical coupling
International audienceThis paper investigates the role of deep convection and overshooting convective clouds in stratosphereâtroposphere dynamical coupling in the tropics during two large major stratospheric sudden warming events in January 2009 and January 2010. During both events, convective activity and precipitation increased in the equatorial Southern Hemisphere as a result of a strengthening of the BrewerâDobson circulation induced by enhanced stratospheric planetary wave activity. Correlation coefficients between variables related to the convective activity and the vertical velocity were calculated to identify the processes connecting stratospheric variability to the troposphere. Convective overshooting clouds showed a direct relationship to lower stratospheric upwelling at around 70â50 hPa. As the tropospheric circulation change lags behind that of the stratosphere, outgoing longwave radiation shows almost no simultaneous correlation with the stratospheric upwelling. This result suggests that the stratospheric circulation change first penetrates into the troposphere through the modulation of deep convective activity
Multiple symptoms of total ozone recovery inside the Antarctic vortex during austral spring
The long-term evolution of total ozone column inside the Antarctic polar vortex is investigated over the 1980-2016 period. Trend analyses are performed using a multilinear regression (MLR) model based on various proxies (heat flux, QBO, solar flux, AAO and aerosols). Annual total ozone column corresponding to the mean monthly values inside the vortex in September and during the period of maximum ozone depletion from September 15th to October 15th are used. Total ozone columns from combined TOMS-N7, SBUV-N9, TOMS-EP and OMI-TOMS satellite datasets and the Multi-Sensor Reanalysis (MRS-2) dataset are considered in the study. Ozone trends are computed by a piecewise trend model (PWT) before and after the turnaround in 2001. In order to evaluate total ozone within the vortex, two classification methods are used, based on the potential vorticity gradient as a function of equivalent latitude. The first standard one, considers this gradient at a single isentropic level (475K or 550K), while the second one uses a range of isentropic levels between 400K and 600K. The regression model includes a new proxy that represents the stability of the vortex during the studied month period. The determination coefficient (R2) between observations and modeled values increases by ~0.05 when this proxy is included in the MLR model. The higher R2 (0.93-0.95) and the minimum residuals are found for the second classification method in the case of both datasets and months periods. Trends in September are statistically significant at 2 sigma level with values ranging between 1.85 and 2.67 DU yr-1 depending on the methods and data sets. This result confirms the recent studies of Antarctic ozone healing during that month. Trends after 2001 are 2 to 3 times lower than before the turnaround year as expected from the response to the slowly ODS decrease in Polar regions.Estimated trends in the 15Sept-15Oct period are smaller than in September. They vary from 1.15 to 1.78 DU yr-1 and are hardly significant at 2 level. Ozone recovery is also confirmed by a steady decrease of the relative area of total ozone values lower than 150 DU within the vortex in the 15Sept-15Oct period since 2010. Comparison of the evolution of the ozone hole area in September and October show a decrease in September, confirming the later formation of the ozone hole during that month.Fil: Pazmino, Andrea. Universidad Paris Saclay; FranciaFil: Godin Beekmann, Sophie. Universidad Paris Saclay; FranciaFil: Hauchecorne, Alain. Universidad Paris Saclay; FranciaFil: Claud, Chantal. Ecole Polytechnique; FranciaFil: Khaykin, Sergey. Universidad Paris Saclay; FranciaFil: Goutail, Florence. Universidad Paris Saclay; FranciaFil: Wolfram, Elian Augusto. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Instituto de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas para la Defensa. Centro de InvestigaciĂłn en LĂĄseres y Aplicaciones; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Unidad de InvestigaciĂłn y Desarrollo EstratĂ©gico para la Defensa. Ministerio de Defensa. Unidad de InvestigaciĂłn y Desarrollo EstratĂ©gico para la Defensa; Argentina. Ministerio de Defensa; ArgentinaFil: Salvador, Jacobo Omar. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Instituto de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas para la Defensa. Centro de InvestigaciĂłn en LĂĄseres y Aplicaciones; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Unidad de InvestigaciĂłn y Desarrollo EstratĂ©gico para la Defensa. Ministerio de Defensa. Unidad de InvestigaciĂłn y Desarrollo EstratĂ©gico para la Defensa; Argentina. Ministerio de Defensa; Argentina. Universidad TecnolĂłgica Nacional. Facultad Regional Buenos Aires; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia Austral; ArgentinaFil: Quel, Eduardo Jaime. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Instituto de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas para la Defensa. Centro de InvestigaciĂłn en LĂĄseres y Aplicaciones; Argentina. Ministerio de Defensa; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Unidad de InvestigaciĂłn y Desarrollo EstratĂ©gico para la Defensa. Ministerio de Defensa. Unidad de InvestigaciĂłn y Desarrollo EstratĂ©gico para la Defensa; Argentin
Recommended from our members
Heavy rainfall in Mediterranean cyclones. Part I: contribution of deep convection and warm conveyor belt
In this study, we provide an insight to the role of deep convection (DC) and the warm conveyor belt (WCB) as leading processes to Mediterranean cyclonesâ heavy rainfall. To this end, we use reanalysis da-ta, lighting and satellite observations to quantify the relative contribution of DC and the WCB to cyclone rainfall, as well as to analyse the spatial and temporal variability of these processes with respect to the cy-clone centre and life cycle.
Results for the period 2005-2015 show that the relationship between cyclone rainfall and intensity has high variability and demonstrate that even intense cyclones may produce low rainfall amounts. However, when considering rainfall averages for cyclone intensity bins, a linear relationship was found. We focus on the 500 most intense tracked cyclones (responsible for about 40-50% of the total 11-year Mediterrane-an rainfall) and distinguish between the ones producing high and low rainfall amounts. DC and the WCB are found to be the main cause of rainfall for the former (producing up to 70% of cyclone rainfall), while, for the latter, DC and the WCB play a secondary role (producing up to 50% of rainfall). Further analysis showed that rainfall due to DC tends to occur close to the cyclonesâ centre and to their eastern sides, while the WCBs tend to produce rainfall towards the northeast. In fact, about 30% of rainfall produced by DC overlaps with rainfall produced by WCBs but this represents only about 8% of rainfall produced by WCBs. This suggests that a considerable percentage of DC is associated with embedded convection in WCBs. Finally, DC was found to be able to produce higher rain rates than WCBs, exceeding 50 mm in 3-hourly accumulated rainfall compared to a maximum of the order of 40 mm for WCBs.
Our results demonstrate in a climatological framework the relationship between cyclone intensity and pro-cesses that lead to heavy rainfall, one of the most prominent environmental risks in the Mediterranean. Therefore, we set perspectives for a deeper analysis of the favourable atmospheric conditions that yield high impact weather
Temperature climatology with Rayleigh lidar above Observatory of Haute-provence : dynamical feedback
International audienceRayleigh lidar in synergy with satellite observations (SSU and AMSU) allow insuring an efficient monitoring and showing that cooling has continued. New approach for trend detection has been developed allowing a better estimate of changes due to radiative forcing. Stratospheric Warmings and gravity waves contribute to insure a dynamical feedback of the long-term changes
- âŠ