Litcius/Paper detail

Meteorological Analysis of the Pacific Northwest June 2021 Heatwave

Paul C. Loikith, Dmitri Kalashnikov

2023Monthly Weather Review25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract During the last week of June 2021, the Pacific Northwest region of North America experienced a record-breaking heatwave of historic proportions. All-time high temperature records were shattered, often by several degrees, across many locations, with Canada setting a new national record, the state of Washington setting a new record, and the state of Oregon tying its previous record. Here we diagnose key meteorology that contributed to this heatwave. The event was associated with a highly anomalous midtropospheric ridge, with peak 500-hPa geopotential height anomalies centered over central British Columbia. This ridge developed over several days as part of a large-scale wave train. Back trajectory analysis indicates that synoptic-scale subsidence and associated adiabatic warming played a key role in enhancing the magnitude of the heat to the south of the ridge peak, while diabatic heating was dominant closer to the ridge center. Easterly/offshore flow inhibited marine cooling and contributed additional downslope warming along the western portions of the region. A notable surface thermally induced trough was evident throughout the event over western Oregon and Washington. An eastward shift of the thermal trough, following the eastward migration of the 500-hPa ridge, allowed an inland surge of cooler marine air and dramatic 24-h cooling, especially along the western periphery of the region. Large-scale horizontal warm-air advection played a minimal role. When compared with past highly amplified ridges over the region, this event was characterized by much higher 500-hPa geopotential heights, a stronger thermal trough, and stronger offshore flow.

Topics & Concepts

RidgeTrough (economics)ClimatologySubmarine pipelineGeologyAdvectionSubsidenceGeopotential heightSynoptic scale meteorologyOceanographyGeographyMeteorologyPrecipitationGeomorphologyMacroeconomicsEconomicsThermodynamicsStructural basinPhysicsPaleontologyClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsAtmospheric aerosols and clouds