Abstract
<p>The atmosphere over the North Atlantic sector exhibits significant interannual and interdecadal variability, as well as long-term trends due to global change. This variability is accompanied by changes in predictability. The origins of North Atlantic variability can to a large extent be traced back to the ocean and the land surface, the upper atmosphere, the tropics, as well as circum-global patterns. In particular, the tropical Pacific and the upper atmosphere have a strong influence on interannual and decadal variability in the North Atlantic region. As an example, the tropical Pacific affects the North Atlantic both through a tropospheric pathway across North America and through an indirect pathway through the stratosphere. Hence, due to the large number of factors influencing the North Atlantic region, their inter-dependence and their non-stationarity, the influence of these different factors is difficult to disentangle. Furthermore, models are often not able to capture the inter-dependence and superposition of these factors, which affects to what extent models are able to predict the North Atlantic region.&#160;This submission will explore the contribution to variability and predictability for several of these remote influences.</p><p>&#160;</p>
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