Suppression of Cold Weather Events over High-Latitude Continents in Warm Climates

Recent studies, using Lagrangian single-column atmospheric models, have proposed that in warmer climates more low clouds would form asmaritime airmasses advect intoNorthernHemisphere high-latitude continental interiors during winter (DJF). This increase in low cloud amount and optical thickness coul...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Climate
Main Authors: Hu, Zeyuan, Cronin, Timothy Wallace, Tziperman, Eli
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Meteorological Society 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/125777
Description
Summary:Recent studies, using Lagrangian single-column atmospheric models, have proposed that in warmer climates more low clouds would form asmaritime airmasses advect intoNorthernHemisphere high-latitude continental interiors during winter (DJF). This increase in low cloud amount and optical thickness could reduce surface radiative cooling and suppressArctic air formation events, partly explaining both the warmwinter high-latitude continental interior climate and frost-intolerant species found there during the Eocene and the positive lapserate feedback in future Arctic climate change scenarios. Here the authors examine the robustness of this lowcloud mechanism in a three-dimensional atmospheric model that includes large-scale dynamics. Different warming scenarios are simulated under prescribed CO2 and sea surface temperature, and the sensitivity of winter temperatures and clouds over high-latitude continental interior to mid- and high-latitude sea surface temperatures is examined. Model results show that winter 2-m temperatures on extreme cold days increase about 50% faster than the winter mean temperatures and the prescribed SST. Low cloud fraction and surface longwave cloud radiative forcing also increase in both the winter mean state and on extreme cold days, consistent with previous Lagrangian air-mass studies, but with cloud fraction increasing for different reasons than proposed by previous work. At high latitudes, the cloud longwave warming effect dominates the shortwave cooling effect, and the net cloud radiative forcing at the surface tends to warm high-latitude land but cool midlatitude land. This could contribute to the reducedmeridional temperature gradient in warmer climates and help explain the greater warming of winter cold extremes relative to winter mean temperatures. ©2018 American Meteorological Society. National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 41530423) National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 41761144072) Harvard Climate Change solutions fund Harvard Global ...