A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing

Arctic sea ice exhibits rapid reductions and large fluctuations during recent decades in conjunction with a warming climate. Arctic sea ice shows a prominent seasonal cycle with the maximum extent in spring and the minimum extent in fall. In this study a suite of modeling experiments, which were sol...

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Published in:Climate
Main Authors: Soumik Basu, Xiangdong Zhang, Zhaomin Wang
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/cli7020025
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author Soumik Basu
Xiangdong Zhang
Zhaomin Wang
author_facet Soumik Basu
Xiangdong Zhang
Zhaomin Wang
author_sort Soumik Basu
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 2
container_start_page 25
container_title Climate
container_volume 7
description Arctic sea ice exhibits rapid reductions and large fluctuations during recent decades in conjunction with a warming climate. Arctic sea ice shows a prominent seasonal cycle with the maximum extent in spring and the minimum extent in fall. In this study a suite of modeling experiments, which were solely forced with observed time-varying sea-ice concentration for spring 1979 to 2008 was conducted using NCAR’s Community Atmosphere Model to identify sea ice impacts on extratropical storms and associated surface climate parameters when they at the peak of their seasonal variability. Storms are the linkage between the large-scale circulation changes, forced by Arctic sea ice and local extreme weather events through strong winds, high precipitation, and high/low air temperature. In this study, a storm identification and tracking algorithm indicates that reduced sea-ice cover enhances Arctic storm activity. As a consequence, surface climate parameters such as surface air temperature (SAT) and precipitation increases in spring over the Arctic. The changes in the Arctic have a direct and indirect effect on the extratropical storm activity over the mid-latitudes. In contrast to the Arctic, storm activity weakens over Eurasia in the years with less sea ice. Further analysis of the surface climate indicates a warmer and dryer Eurasia for years with reduced sea ice.
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/cli7020025
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2225-1154/7/2/25/ 2025-01-16T20:02:39+00:00 A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing Soumik Basu Xiangdong Zhang Zhaomin Wang agris 2019-01-31 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/cli7020025 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cli7020025 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Climate; Volume 7; Issue 2; Pages: 25 extratropical cyclones extreme weather events Arctic sea ice climate model Arctic climate Text 2019 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/cli7020025 2023-07-31T22:00:43Z Arctic sea ice exhibits rapid reductions and large fluctuations during recent decades in conjunction with a warming climate. Arctic sea ice shows a prominent seasonal cycle with the maximum extent in spring and the minimum extent in fall. In this study a suite of modeling experiments, which were solely forced with observed time-varying sea-ice concentration for spring 1979 to 2008 was conducted using NCAR’s Community Atmosphere Model to identify sea ice impacts on extratropical storms and associated surface climate parameters when they at the peak of their seasonal variability. Storms are the linkage between the large-scale circulation changes, forced by Arctic sea ice and local extreme weather events through strong winds, high precipitation, and high/low air temperature. In this study, a storm identification and tracking algorithm indicates that reduced sea-ice cover enhances Arctic storm activity. As a consequence, surface climate parameters such as surface air temperature (SAT) and precipitation increases in spring over the Arctic. The changes in the Arctic have a direct and indirect effect on the extratropical storm activity over the mid-latitudes. In contrast to the Arctic, storm activity weakens over Eurasia in the years with less sea ice. Further analysis of the surface climate indicates a warmer and dryer Eurasia for years with reduced sea ice. Text Arctic Sea ice MDPI Open Access Publishing Arctic Climate 7 2 25
spellingShingle extratropical cyclones
extreme weather events
Arctic sea ice
climate model
Arctic climate
Soumik Basu
Xiangdong Zhang
Zhaomin Wang
A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing
title A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing
title_full A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing
title_fullStr A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing
title_full_unstemmed A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing
title_short A Modeling Investigation of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclone Activity in Spring: The Linkage between Extreme Weather and Arctic Sea Ice Forcing
title_sort modeling investigation of northern hemisphere extratropical cyclone activity in spring: the linkage between extreme weather and arctic sea ice forcing
topic extratropical cyclones
extreme weather events
Arctic sea ice
climate model
Arctic climate
topic_facet extratropical cyclones
extreme weather events
Arctic sea ice
climate model
Arctic climate
url https://doi.org/10.3390/cli7020025