Litcius/Paper detail

Subseasonal swing of cold and warm extremes between Eurasia and North America in winter of 2020/21: initiation and physical process

Shuangmei Ma, Congwen Zhu

2022Environmental Research Letters15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Eurasia and North America experienced a robust subseasonal swing of surface air temperature (SAT) extremes in 2020/21 winter, featuring severe cold (warm) extremes over Eurasia before (after) 15 January and conversely over North America. This sharp subseasonal swing of intercontinental cold and warm extremes exerted considerable severe impacts on human activities and the global economy. Here we examined the initiation and physical process based on data analyses. Our results show annual cycle (AC) anomalies of SAT caused this subseasonal alternating of temperature extremes in two regions. The AC anomalies of SAT are regulated by the phase transition of the North-Pacific-Oscillation-like (NPO-like) circumglobal Rossby wave (CRW) train. Unprecedented warming sea surface temperature over midlatitude Northwest Atlantic in early winter initiated a positive phase of the NPO-like CRW train, via eddy-mediated physical processes and the resultant feedback of sea ice loss over the Barents-Kara Seas. While, the subsequent downward feedback of stratospheric processes resulted in the negative phase of the NPO-like CRW pattern in late winter. This work advances the understanding of the subseasonal predictability of SAT extremes from impacts of AC anomalies and intercontinental seesawing.

Topics & Concepts

ClimatologyPredictabilityEnvironmental scienceRossby waveSea surface temperatureMiddle latitudesPacific decadal oscillationMadden–Julian oscillationSurface air temperatureAtmospheric sciencesClimate changeConvectionMeteorologyOceanographyGeologyGeographyPhysicsQuantum mechanicsClimate variability and modelsOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations