Polar Vortex Disruptions by High Latitude Ocean Warming

Mid-latitude extreme cold outbreaks are associated with disruptions of the Polar Vortex, which often happen abruptly in connection to a Sudden Stratospheric Warming. Understanding Global Warming (particularly Arctic Amplification) impacts on forecasting such events is challenging for the scientific...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hamouda, Mostafa E, Portal, Alice, Pasquero, Claudia
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Authorea, Inc. 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.170602922.21514713/v1
Description
Summary:Mid-latitude extreme cold outbreaks are associated with disruptions of the Polar Vortex, which often happen abruptly in connection to a Sudden Stratospheric Warming. Understanding Global Warming (particularly Arctic Amplification) impacts on forecasting such events is challenging for the scientific community. Here we apply clustering analysis on the Northern Annular Mode to identify surface precursors and the governing mechanisms causing polar vortex disruption events. Two clusters of breakdown emerge; 65% of the events are associated with high latitude ocean warming, expressed as North Pacific anomalies and Barents-Kara sea ice loss. Such warming causes large scale modifications of the tropospheric flow that favors a slowdown of the stratospheric vortex. The persistence of ocean surface temperature patterns allows forecasting polar vortex disruptions, and potentially improves prediction skills at the sub-seasonal to seasonal time scales.