Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper

The Arctic has warmed more than twice as fast as the global average since the mid 20th century, a phenomenon known as Arctic amplification (AA). These profound changes to the Arctic system have coincided with a period of ostensibly more frequent events of extreme weather across the Northern Hemisphe...

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Main Authors: Cohen, Judah, Zhang, Xiangdong, Francis, Jennifer, Jung, Thomas, Kwok, Ronald, Overland, James E., Taylor, Patrick, Lee, Sukyoung, Coumou, Dim, Handorf, Doerthe, Semmler, Tido, Vihma, Timo, Smith, Doug, Ballinger, Thomas J.
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.txstate.edu/handle/10877/15745
https://doi.org/10.5065/D6TH8KGW
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spelling fttexasstate:oai:digital.library.txstate.edu:10877/15745 2023-08-20T04:03:05+02:00 Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper Cohen, Judah Zhang, Xiangdong Francis, Jennifer Jung, Thomas Kwok, Ronald Overland, James E. Taylor, Patrick Lee, Sukyoung Coumou, Dim Handorf, Doerthe Semmler, Tido Vihma, Timo Smith, Doug Ballinger, Thomas J. 2022-05-06T18:30:45Z Text 45 pages 1 file (.pdf) application/pdf https://digital.library.txstate.edu/handle/10877/15745 https://doi.org/10.5065/D6TH8KGW en eng Cohen, J., Zhang, X., Francis, J., Jung, T., Kwok, R., Overland, J., Ballinger, T., Blackport, R., Bhatt, U. S., Chen, H., Coumou, D., Feldstein, S., Handorf, D., Hell, M., Henderson, G., Ionita, M., Kretschmer, M., Laliberte, F., Lee, S., Yoon, J. (2018). Arctic change and possible influence on mid-latitude climate and weather: A US CLIVAR white paper. US CLIVAR Reports, pp. 1-41. https://digital.library.txstate.edu/handle/10877/15745 https://doi.org/10.5065/D6TH8KGW climate arctic weather atmosphere Geography and Environmental Studies 2022 fttexasstate https://doi.org/10.5065/D6TH8KGW 2023-07-29T22:06:09Z The Arctic has warmed more than twice as fast as the global average since the mid 20th century, a phenomenon known as Arctic amplification (AA). These profound changes to the Arctic system have coincided with a period of ostensibly more frequent events of extreme weather across the Northern Hemisphere (NH) mid-latitudes, including extreme heat and rainfall events and recent severe winters. Though winter temperatures have generally warmed since 1960 over mid-to-high latitudes, the acceleration in the rate of warming at high-latitudes, relative to the rest of the NH, started approximately in 1990. Trends since 1990 show cooling over the NH continents, especially in Northern Eurasia. The possible link between Arctic change and mid-latitude climate and weather has spurred a rush of new observational and modeling studies. A number of workshops held during 2013-2014 have helped frame the problem and have called for continuing and enhancing efforts for improving our understanding of Arctic-mid-latitude linkages and its attribution to the occurrence of extreme climate and weather events. Although these workshops have outlined some of the major challenges and provided broad recommendations, further efforts are needed to synthesize the diversified research results to identify where community consensus and gaps exist. Building upon findings and recommendations of the previous workshops, the US CLIVAR Working Group on Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-latitude Climate and Weather convened an international workshop at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, on February 1-3, 2017. Experts in the fields of atmosphere, ocean, and cryosphere sciences assembled to assess the rapidly evolving state of understanding, identify consensus on knowledge and gaps in research, and develop specific actions to accelerate progress within the research community. With more than 100 participants, the workshop was the largest and most comprehensive gathering of climate scientists to address the topic to date. In this white paper, we ... Other/Unknown Material Arctic Arctic Texas State University: Digital Collections Repository Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Texas State University: Digital Collections Repository
op_collection_id fttexasstate
language English
topic climate
arctic
weather
atmosphere
Geography and Environmental Studies
spellingShingle climate
arctic
weather
atmosphere
Geography and Environmental Studies
Cohen, Judah
Zhang, Xiangdong
Francis, Jennifer
Jung, Thomas
Kwok, Ronald
Overland, James E.
Taylor, Patrick
Lee, Sukyoung
Coumou, Dim
Handorf, Doerthe
Semmler, Tido
Vihma, Timo
Smith, Doug
Ballinger, Thomas J.
Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper
topic_facet climate
arctic
weather
atmosphere
Geography and Environmental Studies
description The Arctic has warmed more than twice as fast as the global average since the mid 20th century, a phenomenon known as Arctic amplification (AA). These profound changes to the Arctic system have coincided with a period of ostensibly more frequent events of extreme weather across the Northern Hemisphere (NH) mid-latitudes, including extreme heat and rainfall events and recent severe winters. Though winter temperatures have generally warmed since 1960 over mid-to-high latitudes, the acceleration in the rate of warming at high-latitudes, relative to the rest of the NH, started approximately in 1990. Trends since 1990 show cooling over the NH continents, especially in Northern Eurasia. The possible link between Arctic change and mid-latitude climate and weather has spurred a rush of new observational and modeling studies. A number of workshops held during 2013-2014 have helped frame the problem and have called for continuing and enhancing efforts for improving our understanding of Arctic-mid-latitude linkages and its attribution to the occurrence of extreme climate and weather events. Although these workshops have outlined some of the major challenges and provided broad recommendations, further efforts are needed to synthesize the diversified research results to identify where community consensus and gaps exist. Building upon findings and recommendations of the previous workshops, the US CLIVAR Working Group on Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-latitude Climate and Weather convened an international workshop at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, on February 1-3, 2017. Experts in the fields of atmosphere, ocean, and cryosphere sciences assembled to assess the rapidly evolving state of understanding, identify consensus on knowledge and gaps in research, and develop specific actions to accelerate progress within the research community. With more than 100 participants, the workshop was the largest and most comprehensive gathering of climate scientists to address the topic to date. In this white paper, we ...
author Cohen, Judah
Zhang, Xiangdong
Francis, Jennifer
Jung, Thomas
Kwok, Ronald
Overland, James E.
Taylor, Patrick
Lee, Sukyoung
Coumou, Dim
Handorf, Doerthe
Semmler, Tido
Vihma, Timo
Smith, Doug
Ballinger, Thomas J.
author_facet Cohen, Judah
Zhang, Xiangdong
Francis, Jennifer
Jung, Thomas
Kwok, Ronald
Overland, James E.
Taylor, Patrick
Lee, Sukyoung
Coumou, Dim
Handorf, Doerthe
Semmler, Tido
Vihma, Timo
Smith, Doug
Ballinger, Thomas J.
author_sort Cohen, Judah
title Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper
title_short Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper
title_full Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper
title_fullStr Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper
title_full_unstemmed Arctic Change and Possible Influence on Mid-Latitude Climate and Weather: A US CLIVAR White Paper
title_sort arctic change and possible influence on mid-latitude climate and weather: a us clivar white paper
publishDate 2022
url https://digital.library.txstate.edu/handle/10877/15745
https://doi.org/10.5065/D6TH8KGW
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
op_relation Cohen, J., Zhang, X., Francis, J., Jung, T., Kwok, R., Overland, J., Ballinger, T., Blackport, R., Bhatt, U. S., Chen, H., Coumou, D., Feldstein, S., Handorf, D., Hell, M., Henderson, G., Ionita, M., Kretschmer, M., Laliberte, F., Lee, S., Yoon, J. (2018). Arctic change and possible influence on mid-latitude climate and weather: A US CLIVAR white paper. US CLIVAR Reports, pp. 1-41.
https://digital.library.txstate.edu/handle/10877/15745
https://doi.org/10.5065/D6TH8KGW
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5065/D6TH8KGW
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