The
Big Chill: unusual stratospheric phenomenon is bringing frigid cold
to U.S
An
unusual event playing out high in the atmosphere above the Arctic
Circle is setting the stage for what could be weeks upon weeks of
frigid cold across wide swaths of the U.S., having already helped to
bring cold and snowy weather to parts of Europe.
21
January, 2013
Forecast high
temperatures on Monday, Jan. 21, from the GFS computer model.
Click
to enlarge the image. Credit: Weatherbell
This
phenomenon, known as a “sudden stratospheric warming event,”
started on Jan. 6, but is something that is just beginning to have an
effect on weather patterns across North America and Europe.
While
the physics behind sudden stratospheric warming events are
complicated, their implications are not: such events are often
harbingers of colder weather in North America and Eurasia. The
ongoing event favors colder and possibly stormier weather for as long
as four to eight weeks after the event, meaning that after a mild
start to the winter, the rest of this month and February could bring
the coldest weather of the winter season to parts of the U.S., along
with a heightened chance of snow.
Sudden
stratospheric warming events take place in about half of all Northern
Hemisphere winters, and they have been occurring with increasing
frequency during the past decade, possibly related to the loss of
Arctic sea ice due to global warming. Arctic sea ice declined to its
smallest extent on record in September 2012.
An
Arctic cold front was sliding south from Canada on Friday, getting
ready to clear customs at the border on Saturday and Sunday, bringing
an icy chill to areas from the Plains states through the Mid-Atlantic
by early next week, including what promises to be a chilly second
inauguration for President Obama. Temperatures in Washington on
Monday are expected to hover in the low 30s, only a touch milder than
Obama’s first inauguration, when the temperature was 28°F.
Reinforcing
shots of cold air are likely to affect the Upper Midwest, Great
Plains and into the East throughout February, with some milder
periods sandwiched in between.
Sudden
stratospheric warming events occur when large atmospheric waves,
known as Rossby waves, extend beyond the troposphere where most
weather occurs, and into the stratosphere. This vertical transport of
energy can set a complex process into motion that leads to the
breakdown of the high altitude cold low pressure area that typically
spins above the North Pole during the winter, which is known as the
polar vortex.
The
polar vortex plays a major role in determining how much Arctic air
spills southward toward the mid-latitudes. When there is a strong
polar vortex, cold air tends to stay bottled up in the Arctic.
However, when the vortex weakens or is disrupted, like a spinning top
that suddenly starts wobbling, it can cause polar air masses to surge
south, while the Arctic experiences milder-than-average temperatures.
During
the ongoing stratospheric warming event, the polar vortex split in
two, allowing polar air to spill out from the Arctic, as if a
refrigerator door were suddenly opened.
An
animation showing the evolution of the stratospheric warming event.
The contours show absolute heights and the shading are height
anomalies in the middle stratosphere, or about 16 miles above the
surface. The height anomalies are a good proxy for temperature
anomalies in the stratosphere with red representing high heights or
warm temperatures and blue low heights or cold temperatures. You can
see at the beginning of the loop a cohesive polar vortex along the
coast of Northern Eurasia and then this area of higher heights or
warm temperaturs rush poleward from Siberia into the polar vortex
splitting it into two pieces, one over Eurasia and one over North
America. The dramatic rise in heights or temperatures over the Pole
is the sudden stratospheric warming. The result is that pieces of the
polar vortex move equatorward and with it the associated cold
temperatures. Usually something similar occurs in the troposphere in
the ensuing weeks. Credit: AER/Justin Jones.
When
the sudden stratospheric warming event began in early January, that
signaled to weather forecasters that a cool down was more likely to
occur by the end of the month, since it usually takes many days for
developments in the stratosphere to affect weather in the
troposphere, and vice versa.
“For
reasons I don’t think we fully understand, the changes in the
circulation that happen in the stratosphere [can] descend down all
the way to the Earth’s surface,” said Judah Cohen, director of
seasonal forecasting at Atmospheric and Environmental Research (AER)
in Massachusetts.
As
the polar stratosphere warms, high pressure builds over the Arctic,
causing the polar jet stream to weaken. At the same time, the
midlatitude jet stream strengthens, while also becoming wavier, with
deeper troughs and ridges corresponding to more intense storms and
high pressure areas. In fact, sudden stratospheric warming events
even make so-called “blocked” weather patterns more likely to
occur, which tilts the odds in favor of the development of winter
storms in the U.S. and Europe.
Cohen
was the lead author of a 2009 study that found that sudden
stratospheric warming events are becoming more frequent, a trend that
may be related to an increase in fall snow cover across Eurasia. The
increase in snow cover has in turn been tied to the rapid loss of
Arctic sea ice, since the increase in open water in the fall means
that there is more atmospheric moisture available to fall as rain or
snow.
Cohen
and his colleagues at AER have been using an index of Eurasian snow
cover during the month of October in order to make seasonal weather
forecasts for the following winter, and he said that by using this
technique, they successfully predicted the ongoing stratospheric
warming event 30-days in advance.
“As
far as I know this is a first and has huge implications for
intraseasonal predictions,” he said.
Cohen’s
research has also pointed to stratospheric warming events as one of
the reasons why the second half of recent winters in the Northern
Hemisphere have turned out to be colder than the first half.
“Scientists
about a decade ago predicted that stratospheric warmings would become
less frequent with climate change, however, just the opposite has
happened and they have become more frequent. There is a positive
trend in stratospheric warmings since the turn of the century and I
have argued this is contributing to more severe winters,” he said.
When
the vortex becomes dislodged from the pole, Cohen said, it can lead
to a flow of air that is more north to south than west to east. “So
when the warm air rushes the pole it displaces the cold air over the
pole and forces it equatorward,” Cohen said.
This
has major implications for U.S. winter weather.
High
temperatures in North Dakota and Minnesota may not make it above zero
Fahrenheit on Sunday and Monday. If Minneapolis records a high
temperature below zero it will end its record-breaking streak of four
years without such an occurrence. By Tuesday, the cold air will have
spilled into Kentucky and Maryland as well as New England. And the
long-range outlooks suggest that February is going to be a
colder-than-average month from the Upper Midwest to the East Coast,
although there may be brief breaks from the cold depending on the
prevailing storm track.
Anthony
Artusa, a seasonal climate forecaster at the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), said the cold air spilling
southward for the inauguration may mark the beginning of a
long-lasting cold period that is related to the stratospheric warming
event. “It does look like this could be the early effects of it,”
he said during a conference call with reporters on Thursday.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.