Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States

New evidence is presented to show that decreasing sea ice in the Arctic is causing an increased amplification of the jet stream off the west coast of the United States. We find a statistically significant relationship between sea ice north of Alaska and geopotential height anomalies during the follo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zobel, Zachary T
Other Authors: Wuebbles, Donald
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/89264
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/89264 2023-05-15T14:47:51+02:00 Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States Zobel, Zachary T Wuebbles, Donald 2016-03-08 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/89264 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/2142/89264 undefined IDEALS geo envir Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2016 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:19:26Z New evidence is presented to show that decreasing sea ice in the Arctic is causing an increased amplification of the jet stream off the west coast of the United States. We find a statistically significant relationship between sea ice north of Alaska and geopotential height anomalies during the following winter and spring months. We also show that these semi-persistent height anomalies are increasing in frequency in these locations independent of long term ocean cycles, such as ENSO and PDO. These height anomalies cause more persistent precipitation patterns to certain regions of the United States and we discuss these teleconnections as well as their impacts. These results suggest that as the Arctic, specifically the region north of Alaska, continues to decrease in sea ice coverage a more persistent ridge will form in areas adjacent to this location and affect storm track to the continental United States. Thesis Arctic Sea ice Alaska Unknown Arctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic geo
envir
spellingShingle geo
envir
Zobel, Zachary T
Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States
topic_facet geo
envir
description New evidence is presented to show that decreasing sea ice in the Arctic is causing an increased amplification of the jet stream off the west coast of the United States. We find a statistically significant relationship between sea ice north of Alaska and geopotential height anomalies during the following winter and spring months. We also show that these semi-persistent height anomalies are increasing in frequency in these locations independent of long term ocean cycles, such as ENSO and PDO. These height anomalies cause more persistent precipitation patterns to certain regions of the United States and we discuss these teleconnections as well as their impacts. These results suggest that as the Arctic, specifically the region north of Alaska, continues to decrease in sea ice coverage a more persistent ridge will form in areas adjacent to this location and affect storm track to the continental United States.
author2 Wuebbles, Donald
format Thesis
author Zobel, Zachary T
author_facet Zobel, Zachary T
author_sort Zobel, Zachary T
title Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States
title_short Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States
title_full Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States
title_fullStr Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the link between Arctic sea ice, North Pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the United States
title_sort investigating the link between arctic sea ice, north pacific geopotential height anomalies, and precipitation across the united states
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2142/89264
geographic Arctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
Pacific
genre Arctic
Sea ice
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Sea ice
Alaska
op_source IDEALS
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2142/89264
op_rights undefined
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