Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns

The changes of atmospheric circulation patterns in the Northern Hemisphere and in the Arctic for the period 1939–1990 were investigated. For this purpose, the seasonal and annual frequencies of occurrence of W, E and C macrotypes according to the Vangengeim–Girs typology and groups of synoptic proce...

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Main Author: Przybylak, Rajmund
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/2600
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spelling ftunivtorunir:oai:repozytorium.umk.pl:item/2600 2023-05-15T14:32:22+02:00 Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns Przybylak, Rajmund 2000 http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/2600 eng eng International Journal of Climatology, 20: 231-253 0899-8418 http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/2600 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Arctic diurnal temperature range spatial changes atmospheric circulation changes time series analysis info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2000 ftunivtorunir 2022-02-22T17:30:58Z The changes of atmospheric circulation patterns in the Northern Hemisphere and in the Arctic for the period 1939–1990 were investigated. For this purpose, the seasonal and annual frequencies of occurrence of W, E and C macrotypes according to the Vangengeim–Girs typology and groups of synoptic processes in the Arctic (A, B, W, G, D and K) according to the Dydina classification have been computed. Spatial and seasonal patterns of the mean diurnal temperature range (DTR) in the Arctic are presented, based on the data from 33 Arctic stations for the period 1951–1990. The relationships between the DTR in the Arctic and the atmospheric circulation changes in the Northern Hemisphere and in the Arctic have been investigated. The seasonal mean DTR for each macrotype of circulation and group of circulation was calculated using daily data from ten Arctic stations for the period 1951–1990. These stations represent all climatic regions and subregions identified by the authors of Atlas Arktiki (1985. Gla6noye Upra6lenye Geodeziy i Kartografiy, Moskva, p. 204). In addition, the correlation coefficients between DTR in the Arctic and both the North Atlantic Oscillation Index (NAO) and the Zonal Index (ZI) have been computed. Statistically significant changes of atmospheric circulation in the Northern Hemisphere (mainly in low and moderate latitudes) since the mid-1970s, which are also reported by other researchers, have been confirmed. In the Arctic, the atmospheric circulation has also undergone changes in recent decades; however, these changes are significantly smaller. Both the annual and the seasonal mean DTR values have been found to be the highest in the centre of the southernmost parts of the Canadian and Russian Arctic and the lowest in the Norwegian Arctic. Based on the seasonal means, four types of annual course of the DTR in the Arctic have been identified. The results pertaining to the relationship between DTR and atmospheric circulation provide some evidence that, in recent decades, both the large-scale changes of the atmospheric circulation in the Northern Hemisphere and its changes in the Arctic have led to the damping of the cool half-year DTR in the Arctic. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Nicolaus Copernicus University (UMK) Torun: RUM@K Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Nicolaus Copernicus University (UMK) Torun: RUM@K
op_collection_id ftunivtorunir
language English
topic Arctic
diurnal temperature range
spatial changes
atmospheric circulation changes
time series analysis
spellingShingle Arctic
diurnal temperature range
spatial changes
atmospheric circulation changes
time series analysis
Przybylak, Rajmund
Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns
topic_facet Arctic
diurnal temperature range
spatial changes
atmospheric circulation changes
time series analysis
description The changes of atmospheric circulation patterns in the Northern Hemisphere and in the Arctic for the period 1939–1990 were investigated. For this purpose, the seasonal and annual frequencies of occurrence of W, E and C macrotypes according to the Vangengeim–Girs typology and groups of synoptic processes in the Arctic (A, B, W, G, D and K) according to the Dydina classification have been computed. Spatial and seasonal patterns of the mean diurnal temperature range (DTR) in the Arctic are presented, based on the data from 33 Arctic stations for the period 1951–1990. The relationships between the DTR in the Arctic and the atmospheric circulation changes in the Northern Hemisphere and in the Arctic have been investigated. The seasonal mean DTR for each macrotype of circulation and group of circulation was calculated using daily data from ten Arctic stations for the period 1951–1990. These stations represent all climatic regions and subregions identified by the authors of Atlas Arktiki (1985. Gla6noye Upra6lenye Geodeziy i Kartografiy, Moskva, p. 204). In addition, the correlation coefficients between DTR in the Arctic and both the North Atlantic Oscillation Index (NAO) and the Zonal Index (ZI) have been computed. Statistically significant changes of atmospheric circulation in the Northern Hemisphere (mainly in low and moderate latitudes) since the mid-1970s, which are also reported by other researchers, have been confirmed. In the Arctic, the atmospheric circulation has also undergone changes in recent decades; however, these changes are significantly smaller. Both the annual and the seasonal mean DTR values have been found to be the highest in the centre of the southernmost parts of the Canadian and Russian Arctic and the lowest in the Norwegian Arctic. Based on the seasonal means, four types of annual course of the DTR in the Arctic have been identified. The results pertaining to the relationship between DTR and atmospheric circulation provide some evidence that, in recent decades, both the large-scale changes of the atmospheric circulation in the Northern Hemisphere and its changes in the Arctic have led to the damping of the cool half-year DTR in the Arctic.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Przybylak, Rajmund
author_facet Przybylak, Rajmund
author_sort Przybylak, Rajmund
title Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns
title_short Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns
title_full Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns
title_fullStr Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns
title_full_unstemmed Diurnal temperature range in the Arctic and its relation to hemispheric and Arctic circulation patterns
title_sort diurnal temperature range in the arctic and its relation to hemispheric and arctic circulation patterns
publishDate 2000
url http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/2600
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet Arctic
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation International Journal of Climatology, 20: 231-253
0899-8418
http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/2600
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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