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Drivers behind the summer 2010 wave train leading to Russian heatwave and Pakistan flooding

Giorgia Di Capua, Sarah Sparrow, Kai Kornhuber, Efi Rousi, Scott Osprey, David Wallom, Bart van den Hurk, Dim Coumou

2021npj Climate and Atmospheric Science98 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Summer 2010 saw two simultaneous extremes linked by an atmospheric wave train: a record-breaking heatwave in Russia and severe floods in Pakistan. Here, we study this wave event using a large ensemble climate model experiment. First, we show that the circulation in 2010 reflected a recurrent wave train connecting the heatwave and flooding events. Second, we show that the occurrence of the wave train is favored by three drivers: (1) 2010 sea surface temperature anomalies increase the probability of this wave train by a factor 2-to-4 relative to the model’s climatology, (2) early-summer soil moisture deficit in Russia not only increases the probability of local heatwaves, but also enhances rainfall extremes over Pakistan by forcing an atmospheric wave response, and (3) high-latitude land warming favors wave-train occurrence and therefore rainfall and heat extremes. These findings highlight the complexity and synergistic interactions between different drivers, reconciling some seemingly contradictory results from previous studies.

Topics & Concepts

Flooding (psychology)Heat waveClimatologyForcing (mathematics)Environmental scienceLatitudeClimate modelClimate changeMeteorologyAtmospheric sciencesGeographyGeologyOceanographyPsychotherapistPsychologyGeodesyClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
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