Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990

Detailed analysis of the influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature ranges (DTR) in the Arctic in 1951-1990 is presented. This analysis is preceded by a description of a cloudiness fluctuation and trends in the Arctic during the last decades. A statistically signific...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Przybylak, Rajmund
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/3070
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spelling ftunivtorunir:oai:repozytorium.umk.pl:item/3070 2023-05-15T14:33:31+02:00 Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990 Przybylak, Rajmund 1999 http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/3070 eng eng Polish Polar Research, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 149–173 http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/3070 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Arctic cloudiness trends extreme air temperatures time series analysis info:eu-repo/semantics/article 1999 ftunivtorunir 2022-02-22T17:31:29Z Detailed analysis of the influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature ranges (DTR) in the Arctic in 1951-1990 is presented. This analysis is preceded by a description of a cloudiness fluctuation and trends in the Arctic during the last decades. A statistically significant increase of the mean cloudiness in the Arctic occurred in winter, spring and during a year. It could be due to incursion of a polluted air to the Arctic from the lower latitudes. An overall pattern of the influence of cloudiness on the daily maximum air temperature (TMAX) and the minimum air temperature (TMIN) is roughly similar. However, sometimes there are significant differences in the anomalies for clear, partly cloudy and cloudy days. In summer even an opposite influence of cloudiness on TMAX than on TMIN was noted for the Norwegian Arctic and the southern Canadian Arctic. Relations between cloudiness and DTR, based on daily data, entirely confirm the previous conclusions based on monthly data. Therefore, an increasing cloudiness of the last decades significantly influences a decrease of DTR in die Arctic, especially during the warm half-year when a solar radiation is present. During the cool half-year (particularly at polar night) an influence of cloudiness is clearly weaker and not univocal, and probably less important than non-periodical day-to-day changes of air temperature, governed at this time by very vigorous atmospheric circulation. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic polar night Polar Research 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
cloudiness trends
extreme air temperatures
time series analysis
spellingShingle Arctic
cloudiness trends
extreme air temperatures
time series analysis
Przybylak, Rajmund
Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990
topic_facet Arctic
cloudiness trends
extreme air temperatures
time series analysis
description Detailed analysis of the influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature ranges (DTR) in the Arctic in 1951-1990 is presented. This analysis is preceded by a description of a cloudiness fluctuation and trends in the Arctic during the last decades. A statistically significant increase of the mean cloudiness in the Arctic occurred in winter, spring and during a year. It could be due to incursion of a polluted air to the Arctic from the lower latitudes. An overall pattern of the influence of cloudiness on the daily maximum air temperature (TMAX) and the minimum air temperature (TMIN) is roughly similar. However, sometimes there are significant differences in the anomalies for clear, partly cloudy and cloudy days. In summer even an opposite influence of cloudiness on TMAX than on TMIN was noted for the Norwegian Arctic and the southern Canadian Arctic. Relations between cloudiness and DTR, based on daily data, entirely confirm the previous conclusions based on monthly data. Therefore, an increasing cloudiness of the last decades significantly influences a decrease of DTR in die Arctic, especially during the warm half-year when a solar radiation is present. During the cool half-year (particularly at polar night) an influence of cloudiness is clearly weaker and not univocal, and probably less important than non-periodical day-to-day changes of air temperature, governed at this time by very vigorous atmospheric circulation.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Przybylak, Rajmund
author_facet Przybylak, Rajmund
author_sort Przybylak, Rajmund
title Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990
title_short Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990
title_full Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990
title_fullStr Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990
title_full_unstemmed Influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the Arctic in 1951-1990
title_sort influence of cloudiness on extreme air temperatures and diurnal temperature range in the arctic in 1951-1990
publishDate 1999
url http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/3070
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
polar night
Polar Research
genre_facet Arctic
polar night
Polar Research
op_relation Polish Polar Research, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 149–173
http://repozytorium.umk.pl/handle/item/3070
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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