24 research outputs found

    Effects of Greenhouse Gases Like Carbon Dioxide Can Be Spotted Earlier in the Middle Atmosphere

    Get PDF
    Understanding and dealing with climate change requires us to look at the atmosphere as a whole, not just the lowest portion near the surface. Analyzing the effects of greenhouse gases on the middle atmosphere helps to identify and understand the effects of climate change early on.York's Knowledge Mobilization Unit provides services and funding for faculty, graduate students, and community organizations seeking to maximize the impact of academic research and expertise on public policy, social programming, and professional practice. It is supported by SSHRC and CIHR grants, and by the Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation. [email protected] www.researchimpact.c

    Teleconnections of the Quasi‐Biennial Oscillation in a multi‐model ensemble of QBO‐resolving models

    Get PDF
    The Quasi-biennial Oscillation (QBO) dominates the interannual variability of the tropical stratosphere and influences other regions of the atmosphere. The high predictability of the QBO implies that its teleconnections could lead to increased skill of seasonal and decadal forecasts provided the relevant mechanisms are accurately represented in models. Here modelling and sampling uncertainties of QBO teleconnections are examined using a multi-model ensemble of QBO-resolving atmospheric general circulation models that have carried out a set of coordinated experiments as part of the Stratosphere-troposphere Processes And their Role in Climate (SPARC) QBO initiative (QBOi). During Northern Hemisphere winter, the stratospheric polar vortex in most of these models strengthens when the QBO near 50 hPa is westerly and weakens when it is easterly, consistent with, but weaker than, the observed response. These weak responses are likely due to model errors, such as systematically weak QBO amplitudes near 50 hPa, affecting the teleconnection. The teleconnection to the North Atlantic Oscillation is less well captured overall, but of similar strength to the observed signal in the few models that do show it. The models do not show clear evidence of a QBO teleconnection to the Northern Hemisphere Pacific-sector subtropical jet

    Forcing in a nonzonal mean flow

    No full text

    A study of wave-wave interactions in a steady-state stratospheric model /

    No full text
    Interactions among stationary planetary waves in the winter stratosphere are studied using steady-state quasi-geostrophic models from both a theoretical and numerical point of view.A triad of small amplitude waves is examined analytically using a constant zonal wind beta beta-plane model in which dissipation is required for the waves to interact. The nature of the modifications to the linear solutions is found to depend both on the propagation characteristics and the zonal wavenumber of the modes.Numerical solutions are determined using a climatological basic state and boundary forcing. The changes to the linear structure are relatively weak. Zonal wavenumber 1 is the most affected, experiencing primarily an increase in amplitude in the vicinity of 65spcirc sp circN, 26 km. As a direct consequence of the almost linear relationship found to exist between the zonal streamfunction and the zonal potential vorticity in middle and northerly latitudes, the wave-wave interactions are, to a first approximation, dissipation-induced. The presence of weak dissipation in this region implies only weak interactions, which explains the quasi-linear structure of the solutions
    corecore