Mid-Latitude Jet Response to Pan-Arctic and Regional Arctic Warming in Idealized GCM

Author:

Yang Gun-Hwan1,Moon Woosok1,Noh Hayeon1,Kim Baek-Min1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Earth Environmental System Science, Major of Environmental Atmospheric Sciences, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, Republic of Korea

Abstract

To study the dynamical mechanism by which Arctic amplification affects extreme weather events in mid-latitude, we investigated the local and remote circulation response to pan-Arctic and regional Arctic thermal forcing. A comprehensive atmospheric GCM (General Circulation Model) coupled to a slab mixed-layer ocean model is used for the experiment. With the increasing thermal forcing in the pan-Arctic configuration, the mid-latitude jet tends to shift equatorward, mainly due to the southward shift of the convergence zone of eddy-heat flux and eddy-momentum flux. From the regional Arctic forced experiments, zonal mean response is similar to the response from the pan-Arctic configuration. The non-zonal response is characterized by the 300 hPa circumpolar zonal wind of wavenumber-1 structure, which establishes an enhanced wavier mid-latitude jet. In the polar region at 300 hPa, regional thermal forcing drives a distinct east–west dipole circulation pattern, in which anticyclonic circulation is located to the west of the thermal forcing, and cyclonic circulation is located to the east. The lower-level circulation shows the opposite pattern to the upper-level circulation in the polar region. While the strength of circulation increases with gradual thermal forcing, the overall dipole pattern is unchanged. In regional warming simulation, compared to the pan-Arctic warming, increasing residual heat flux in a dipole pattern causes enhanced heat advection to mid-latitude.

Funder

Korea Environment Industry & Technology Institute

Korea Ministry of Environment

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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