Atmospheric Rivers in the Eastern and Midwestern United States Associated With Baroclinic Waves

Author:

O’Brien Travis A.12ORCID,Loring Burlen34ORCID,Dufek Amanda Sabatini5ORCID,Islam Mohammad Rubaiat16ORCID,Kamnani Diya1ORCID,Quagraine Kwesi Twentwewa1ORCID,Kirkpatrick Cody1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Indiana University Bloomington IN USA

2. Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Berkeley CA USA

3. Computational Research Division Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Berkeley CA USA

4. Now at NVIDIA Corporation Santa Clara CA USA

5. National Energy Research Supercomputing Center Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Berkeley CA USA

6. Now at National Center for Atmospheric Research, Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division Boulder CO USA

Abstract

AbstractAtmospheric rivers (ARs) significantly impact the hydrological cycle and associated extremes in western continental regions. Recent studies suggest ARs also influence water resources and extremes in continental interiors. AR detection tools indicate that AR conditions are relatively frequent in areas east of the Rocky Mountains. The origin of these ARs, whether from synoptic‐scale waves or mesoscale processes, is unclear. This study uses meteorological composite maps and transects of AR conditions during the four seasons. The analysis reveals that ARs east of the Rockies are associated with long‐wave, baroclinic Rossby waves. This result demonstrates that eastern North American ARs are dynamically similar to their western coastal counterparts, though mechanisms for vertical moisture flux differ between the two. These findings provide a foundation for understanding future climate change and ARs in this region and offer new methods for evaluating climate model simulations.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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