Litcius/Paper detail

Summer Deep Depressions Increase Over the Eastern North Atlantic

Fabio D’Andrea, Jean‐Philippe Duvel, Gwendal Rivière, Robert Vautard, Christophe Cassou, Julien Cattiaux, Dim Coumou, Davide Faranda, Tamara Happé, Aglaé Jézéquel, Aurélien Ribes, Pascal Yiou

2024Geophysical Research Letters14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Mid‐tropospheric deep depressions in summer over the North Atlantic are shown to have strongly increased in the eastern and strongly decreased in the western North Atlantic region. This evolution is linked to a change in baroclinicity in the west of the North Atlantic ocean and over the North American coast, likely due to the increased surface temperature there. Deep depressions in the Eastern North Atlantic are linked to a temperature pattern typical of extreme heat events in the region. The same analysis is applied to a sample of CMIP6 model outputs, and no such trends are found. This study suggests a link between the observed increase of summer extreme heat events in the region and the increase of the number of Atlantic depressions. The failure of CMIP6 models to reproduce these events can consequently also reside in an incorrect reproduction of this specific feature of midlatitude atmospheric dynamics.

Topics & Concepts

Gulf StreamBaroclinityClimatologyNorth Atlantic Deep WaterAtlantic Equatorial modeOceanographyGeologyTropical AtlanticSea surface temperatureMiddle latitudesLatitudeNorth Atlantic oscillationThermohaline circulationGeodesyClimate variability and modelsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations