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Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from the stratosphere to the troposphere. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 1999. Journal of Geophysical Research, 104:30937. Stratosphere/troposhere coupling: observations Evidence of the coupling, through the propagation of stratospheric anomalies into the troposphere Consequences of that propagation (coupling) in surface weather. Time scale of the coupling.
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Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

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Page 1: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P.

Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581.

Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from the stratosphere to the troposphere. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 1999. Journal of Geophysical Research, 104:30937.

Stratosphere/troposhere coupling: observations

Evidence of the coupling, through the propagation of stratospheric anomalies into the troposphere

Consequences of that propagation (coupling) in surface weather.

Time scale of the coupling.

Page 2: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from the stratosphere to the troposphere

M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton

Objectives:

Examine the coupling between the stratosphere and troposphere using the dominant mode of variability in the northern hemisphere (AO/NAM)

Page 3: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Data

Daily NCEP reanalysis of geopotential, temperature and wind, 17 pressure levels, from 1000hPa to 10hPa, 1958-1997.

AO pattern: leading EOF of 90day-low-pass filtered anomalies December-February north of 20°N at 1000, 300, 100, 30 10 hPa (single field).

AO index: daily time series (principal components) of the EOF1 based on the geopotential data.

Signatures of AO: regression of the AO index with a data field at each of 17 levels.

Page 4: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Signatures of AO

Baldwin, MP, X. Cheng and TJ Dunkerton. 1994. GRL, 21,1141

Thompson WJ and JM Wallace. 1998. GRL, 25,1297.

Page 5: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Signatures of AO

Page 6: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Downward propagation of AO

In what degree we can expect to see a pattern representing the AO (at each of the 17 pressure levels) in

a daily anomaly map?

Day 1 (Jan1, 1958) Day 14609 (Dec 31, 1997)

1000 hPa

10 hPa

……

… ……

Daily map of deseasoned ZxAO signature, ZxxAO

Z= ZxxAO with corresponding to the “best fit”

1 2 14609

1000 hPa

10 hPa

… values: AO signature time series

Page 7: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Downward propagation of AO

Top: Daily mean 50hPa height averaged over the region poleward of 70°N, with climatological mean removed.Bottom: idem top but for 1000hPa height over the region poleward of 65°.From: Thompson WJ and JM Wallace. 2000. JClim,13,1000.

Page 8: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.
Page 9: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.
Page 10: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Downward propagation of AO

Page 11: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimesM.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton

Objectives:

To examine the posibility of using the large stratospheric circulation anomalies as a prediction tool.

How:

……time averages and variability of near-surface circulation during 60-day period after the onset of large stratospheric circulation anomalies.

Page 12: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Data

November-April, 26 pressure levels, from 1000hPa to 0.316 hPa

Annular mode: first EOF of 90day-low-pass filtered anomalies north of 20°N for each pressure altitude.

Daily values of annular mode as the projection of the daily geopotential anomalies onto the leading EOF patterns (equivalent to the AO signatures time series)

1 2 Dec 31, 1999

1000 hPa

10 hPa

Annular mode values

Page 13: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Northern annular mode patterns in geopotential at 26 pressure altitudes (hPa), with contours in meters. The patterns represent the first empirical orthogonal function of 90-day low-pass filtered anomalies (for November to April north of 20°N). The 1000-hPa pattern is the Arctic Oscillation.

Page 14: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Composite of large negative and large positive anomalies as measured by the 10hPa annular mode values, defined by the onset of large stratospheric anomalies:

Weak

Strong

Vortex events

-3.0

+1.5

Page 15: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Weak / strong vortex regimes: 60-day periods after the dates on which the -3.0 and +1.5 thresholds were crossed.

What happens with the tropospheric circulation after these extreme events?

Sea level pressure anomalies

Page 16: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Changes in probability density functions (PDFs) of the daily normalized AO and NAO indices

Thompson, DW and JM Wallace. 2001. Science.293:85

Associated with changes in frequency of occurrence of significant weather events (cold outbreaks, snow, high winds) across Europe, Asia and North America.

Page 17: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Mean latitudes

Frequency

Page 18: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Can other stratospheric processes affect the likelihood of extreme events and subsequent

changes in weather?

Easterly QBO Weak vortex regime SSW (Plate 2 previous paper)

Westerly QBO Strong vortex regime

Long-range predictability

Page 19: Stratospheric harbingers of anomalous weather regimes. M.P. Baldwin and T.J Dunkerton. 2001. Science, 294:581. Propagation of the Arctic Oscillation from.

Summary

Coupling between the stratosphere and troposphere occur in northern winter.

Large-amplitude stratospheric anomalies propagates downward through the troposphere.

Stratospheric anomalies tend to precede tropospheric anomalies (i.e. weather patterns, sfc temperature anomalies).

These stratospheric signals may be used as a predictive tool for surface weather conditions.