Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe?

We examine a possible mechanism leading to late-winter warming and thus to an early spring in Europe. From the NCEP Reanalysis, we extract for the years 1948-1999 ocean-surface winds over the eastern North Atlantic, and air temperatures at the surface, T(sub s), and at the 500 mb level, T(sub 500),...

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Main Authors: Atlas, Robert, Sud, Y. C., Russell, G. L., Otterman, J., Chou, S.-H., Rogers, J., Chase, T. N., Jusem, J. C., Pielke, R. A., Sr., Schubert, S. D.
Language:unknown
Published: 2001
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20020060510
id ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:20020060510
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:20020060510 2023-05-15T17:29:15+02:00 Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe? Atlas, Robert Sud, Y. C. Russell, G. L. Otterman, J. Chou, S.-H. Rogers, J. Chase, T. N. Jusem, J. C. Pielke, R. A., Sr. Schubert, S. D. Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available [2001] application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20020060510 unknown Document ID: 20020060510 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20020060510 Copyright, Public use permitted CASI Meteorology and Climatology 2001 ftnasantrs 2018-06-23T22:46:50Z We examine a possible mechanism leading to late-winter warming and thus to an early spring in Europe. From the NCEP Reanalysis, we extract for the years 1948-1999 ocean-surface winds over the eastern North Atlantic, and air temperatures at the surface, T(sub s), and at the 500 mb level, T(sub 500), in late-winter and spring. T(sub s) is extracted at six European locations, all at 50.5 N, ranging in longitude from 1.9 E (northeastern France) to 26.2 E (Ukraine). To quantify the advection of maritime air into Europe, we evaluate for 3-pentad groups the Index I(sub na) of the southwesterlies at 45 N; 20 W: I(sub na) is the average wind speed at this point if the direction is from the quadrant 180-270 deg (when the direction is different, the contribution counts as zero). In late winter correlations C(sub it) between the Index I(sub na) and the temperature T(sub s) are substantial, up to the 0.6 level, in western Europe (but weaker correlations for Poland and Ukraine). C(sub it) drops sharply by mid-March, taking occasionally negative values subsequently. This drop in C(sub it) indicates that maritime air advection is no longer associated closely with the surface-air warming, the role of immolation becomes important, and thus the drop in C(sub it) marks the arrival of spring. Correlations C(sub i delta) between I(sub na) and our lapse-rate parameter delta, the difference between T(sub s) and T(sub 500), indicate that the flow of warm maritime-air from the North Atlantic into this 'corridor' at 50.5 N is predominantly at low tropospheric level. By computing the best linear fit to I(sub na) and T(sub s), the trends for the period 1948-1999 are evaluated. The trends are appreciable in the second half of February and the first half of March. Our 3-pentad analysis points to the interval from mid-February to mid-March as the end-of-winter period in which the southwesterlies over the eastern North Atlantic become stronger and the surface-air temperatures in Europe rise markedly, the lapse rate becomes steeper, and concurrently the longitudinal temperature gradient between the Somme (France) and the Oder (Germany/Poland border) is reduced by 0.8 C, that is, by 20% of its 1948 value. Our thesis, that the observed late-winter warming and the corollary advancement of spring in Europe resulted at least in part from stronger southwesterlies over the North Atlantic, merits further investigations. Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic Meteorology and Climatology
spellingShingle Meteorology and Climatology
Atlas, Robert
Sud, Y. C.
Russell, G. L.
Otterman, J.
Chou, S.-H.
Rogers, J.
Chase, T. N.
Jusem, J. C.
Pielke, R. A., Sr.
Schubert, S. D.
Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe?
topic_facet Meteorology and Climatology
description We examine a possible mechanism leading to late-winter warming and thus to an early spring in Europe. From the NCEP Reanalysis, we extract for the years 1948-1999 ocean-surface winds over the eastern North Atlantic, and air temperatures at the surface, T(sub s), and at the 500 mb level, T(sub 500), in late-winter and spring. T(sub s) is extracted at six European locations, all at 50.5 N, ranging in longitude from 1.9 E (northeastern France) to 26.2 E (Ukraine). To quantify the advection of maritime air into Europe, we evaluate for 3-pentad groups the Index I(sub na) of the southwesterlies at 45 N; 20 W: I(sub na) is the average wind speed at this point if the direction is from the quadrant 180-270 deg (when the direction is different, the contribution counts as zero). In late winter correlations C(sub it) between the Index I(sub na) and the temperature T(sub s) are substantial, up to the 0.6 level, in western Europe (but weaker correlations for Poland and Ukraine). C(sub it) drops sharply by mid-March, taking occasionally negative values subsequently. This drop in C(sub it) indicates that maritime air advection is no longer associated closely with the surface-air warming, the role of immolation becomes important, and thus the drop in C(sub it) marks the arrival of spring. Correlations C(sub i delta) between I(sub na) and our lapse-rate parameter delta, the difference between T(sub s) and T(sub 500), indicate that the flow of warm maritime-air from the North Atlantic into this 'corridor' at 50.5 N is predominantly at low tropospheric level. By computing the best linear fit to I(sub na) and T(sub s), the trends for the period 1948-1999 are evaluated. The trends are appreciable in the second half of February and the first half of March. Our 3-pentad analysis points to the interval from mid-February to mid-March as the end-of-winter period in which the southwesterlies over the eastern North Atlantic become stronger and the surface-air temperatures in Europe rise markedly, the lapse rate becomes steeper, and concurrently the longitudinal temperature gradient between the Somme (France) and the Oder (Germany/Poland border) is reduced by 0.8 C, that is, by 20% of its 1948 value. Our thesis, that the observed late-winter warming and the corollary advancement of spring in Europe resulted at least in part from stronger southwesterlies over the North Atlantic, merits further investigations.
author Atlas, Robert
Sud, Y. C.
Russell, G. L.
Otterman, J.
Chou, S.-H.
Rogers, J.
Chase, T. N.
Jusem, J. C.
Pielke, R. A., Sr.
Schubert, S. D.
author_facet Atlas, Robert
Sud, Y. C.
Russell, G. L.
Otterman, J.
Chou, S.-H.
Rogers, J.
Chase, T. N.
Jusem, J. C.
Pielke, R. A., Sr.
Schubert, S. D.
author_sort Atlas, Robert
title Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe?
title_short Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe?
title_full Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe?
title_fullStr Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe?
title_full_unstemmed Are Stronger North-Atlantic Southwesterlies the Forcing to the Late-Winter Warming in Europe?
title_sort are stronger north-atlantic southwesterlies the forcing to the late-winter warming in europe?
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20020060510
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source CASI
op_relation Document ID: 20020060510
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20020060510
op_rights Copyright, Public use permitted
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