A global climatology of polar lows investigated for local differences and wind-shear environments
Polar lows are intense mesoscale cyclones developing in marine polar air masses. This study presents a new global climatology of polar lows based on the ERA-5 reanalysis for the years 1979–2020. Criteria for the detection of polar lows are derived based on a comparison of six polar-low archives with...
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Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2021
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-2021-60 https://wcd.copernicus.org/preprints/wcd-2021-60/ |
Summary: | Polar lows are intense mesoscale cyclones developing in marine polar air masses. This study presents a new global climatology of polar lows based on the ERA-5 reanalysis for the years 1979–2020. Criteria for the detection of polar lows are derived based on a comparison of six polar-low archives with cyclones derived by a mesoscale tracking algorithm. The characteristics associated with polar lows are considered by the criteria: (i) intense cyclone: large relative vorticity, (ii) mesoscale: small vortex diameter, and (iii) development in the marine polar air masses: combination of low dry-static stability and low potential temperature at the tropopause. Polar lows develop in all marine areas adjacent to sea ice or cold landmasses, mainly in the winter half-year. The length and intensity of the season are regionally dependent. The highest density appears in the Nordic Seas. For all ocean sub-basins, forward-shear polar lows are the most common, whereas weak shear and those propagating towards warmer environments are second and third most frequent, depending on the area. Reverse-shear polar lows and those propagating towards colder environments are rather seldom, especially in the Southern Ocean. Generally, PLs share many characteristics across ocean basins and wind-shear categories. The most remarkable difference is that forward-shear polar lows are often occurring in stronger vertical wind shear, whereas reverse-shear polar lows feature lower static stability. Hence, the contribution to a fast baroclinic growth rate is slightly different for the shear categories. |
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