Abstract
Abstract. The agreement between reanalysis datasets, in
terms of the zonal-mean momentum budget, is evaluated during sudden
stratospheric warming (SSW) events. It is revealed that there is a good
agreement among datasets in the lower stratosphere and troposphere concerning
zonal-mean zonal wind, but less so in the upper stratosphere. Forcing terms
of the momentum equation are also relatively similar in the lower atmosphere,
but their uncertainties are typically larger than uncertainties of the zonal-wind tendency. Similar to zonal-wind tendency, the agreement among forcing
terms is degraded in the upper stratosphere. Discrepancies among reanalyses
increase during the onset of SSW events, a period characterized by unusually
large fluxes of planetary-scale waves from the troposphere to the
stratosphere, and decrease substantially after the onset. While the largest
uncertainties in the resolved terms of the momentum budget are found in the
Coriolis torque, momentum flux convergence also presents a non-negligible
spread among the reanalyses. Such a spread is reduced in the latest
reanalysis products, decreasing the uncertainty of the momentum budget. It is
also found that the uncertainties in the Coriolis torque depend on the
strength of SSW events: the SSW events that exhibit the most intense deceleration
of zonal-mean zonal wind are subject to larger discrepancies among
reanalyses. These uncertainties in stratospheric circulation, however, are
not communicated to the troposphere.
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17 articles.
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