Abstract
Abstract. Thermodynamic profiles are affected by both the large-scale dynamics and the local processes, such as radiation, cloud formation
and turbulence. Based on ERA5 reanalysis, radiosoundings and cloud cover
observations from winters 2009–2018, this study demonstrates manifold
impacts of large-scale circulation on temperature and specific humidity
profiles in the circumpolar Arctic north of 65∘ N. Characteristic
wintertime circulation types are allocated using self-organizing maps
(SOMs). The study shows that influence of different large-scale flows must
be viewed as a progressing set of processes: (1) horizontal advection of
heat and moisture, driven by circulation, lead to so-called first-order
effects on thermodynamic profiles and turbulent surface fluxes, and (2) the
advection is followed by transformation of the air through various physical
processes, causing second-order effects. An example of second-order effects
is the associated cloud formation, which shifts the strongest radiative
cooling from the surface to the cloud top. The temperature and specific
humidity profiles are most sensitive to large-scale circulation over the
Eurasian land west of 90∘ E and the Arctic Ocean sea ice, whereas
impacts over North America and Greenland are more ambiguous. Eurasian land,
between 90 and 140∘ E, occasionally receives warm and
moist air from the northern North Atlantic, which, with the support of
radiative impacts of clouds, weakens the otherwise strong temperature and
specific humidity inversions. Altitudes of maximum temperature and specific
humidity in a profile and their variability between the circulation types
are good indicators of the depth of the layer impacted by
surface–atmosphere processes interacting with the large-scale circulation.
Different circulation types typically cause variations of a few hundred
metres to this altitude, and the layer impacted is deepest over
north-eastern Eurasia and North America.
Funder
Academy of Finland
Vetenskapsrådet
Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse
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