The Basic Ingredients of the North Atlantic Storm Track. Part II: Sea Surface Temperatures

Author:

Brayshaw David James1,Hoskins Brian2,Blackburn Michael3

Affiliation:

1. National Centre for Atmospheric Sciences, and Department of Meteorology, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom

2. Department of Meteorology, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom

3. National Centre for Atmospheric Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract The impact of North Atlantic SST patterns on the storm track is investigated using a hierarchy of GCM simulations using idealized (aquaplanet) and “semirealistic” boundary conditions in the atmospheric component (HadAM3) of the third climate configuration of the Met Office Unified Model (HadCM3). This framework enables the mechanisms determining the tropospheric response to North Atlantic SST patterns to be examined, both in isolation and in combination with continental-scale landmasses and orography. In isolation, a “Gulf Stream” SST pattern acts to strengthen the downstream storm track while a “North Atlantic Drift” SST pattern weakens it. These changes are consistent with changes in the extratropical SST gradient and near-surface baroclinicity, and each storm-track response is associated with a consistent change in the tropospheric jet structure. Locally enhanced near-surface horizontal wind convergence is found over the warm side of strengthened SST gradients associated with ascending air and increased precipitation, consistent with previous studies. When the combined SST pattern is introduced into the semirealistic framework (including the “North American” continent and the “Rocky Mountains”), the results suggest that the topographically generated southwest–northeast tilt in the North Atlantic storm track is enhanced. In particular, the Gulf Stream shifts the storm track south in the western Atlantic whereas the strong high-latitude SST gradient in the northeastern Atlantic enhances the storm track there.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference39 articles.

1. Brayshaw, D. J. , 2006: Large scale forcing of the North Atlantic storm track. Ph.D. thesis, Reading University, 213 pp.

2. The storm-track response to idealized SST perturbations in an aquaplanet GCM;Brayshaw;J. Atmos. Sci.,2008

3. The basic ingredients of the North Atlantic storm track. Part I: Land–sea contrast and orography;Brayshaw;J. Atmos. Sci.,2009

4. Tropical and extratropical responses of the North Atlantic atmospheric circulation to a sustained weakening of the MOC;Brayshaw;J. Climate,2009

5. Zonal asymmetries, teleconnections, and annular patterns in a GCM;Cash;J. Atmos. Sci.,2005

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