Arctic
Heat Wave Re-Intensifies Over Central Siberia Setting off Rash of
Tundra Fires
Arctic coastal temperatures usually average less than 50 degrees Fahrenheit at this time of year, but the region beneath this Arctic heat dome has averaged about 15-20 degrees hotter over the past week. Further south, where the tundra fields and arboreal forests of Siberia lay, temperatures have been even warmer with highs stretching into the middle and upper 80s and even lower 90s in some isolated locations. The added heat and the occasional thunderstorm that will typically form under such highly unusual Arctic conditions enhances the chance of wildfires. Now, after a week of such conditions, more than a score of large fires rage.
Tuesday daytime temperatures for Siberia. Red indicates temperatures ranging from 77-86 degrees Fahrenheit. Note the broad swath of these temperatures riding up from Russia all the way to the Arctic coastline. These measures represent daytime temperatures at the point recorded and do not necessarily record daily maximum temperatures for a given location.
Unfortunately, forecasts call for hot conditions to persist over this region of the Arctic at least until Saturday. Then, the heat dome and related Jet Stream bulge is predicted to slowly shift toward Europe, bringing heat, dryness and related risk of wildfires along with it.
(Image source: NASA)
23
July, 2013
Over
the past week, temperatures have been building throughout Central
Siberia. A broad swath of heat pushed thermometers into the upper 70s
to upper 80s (with isolated spots showing 90+ degree readings,
Fahrenheit) in a broad region stretching from Siberia’s forests all
the way to the Arctic Coast. These heatwave conditions set off more
than a score of large fires that raged through both Arctic forest and
across broad areas of tundra. The largest of these fires covered
areas up to 1000 square miles and numerous smoke plumes were visible
from satellite, some of which stretched more than 800 miles in
length. A larger pall of smoke from this region covered areas of
North-Central Russia, the Arctic Coast and sections of Europe more
than 2,000 miles away.
You
can view these fires and related smoke plumes in the NASA Aqua
Satellite image provided by Lance-Modis above.
The
scorching Arctic heat wave and massive burning has been set off, once
again, by a high amplitude northward bulge in the polar Jet Stream
and related ‘heat dome’ high pressure system resting just beneath
the bulge. As you can see in the below image, provided by the
California Regional Weather Service, this particular heat bulge
extends past the 80 degree North Latitude line, nearly reaching the
North Pole. This extraordinary upward sweep in the Jet has completely
compromised the polar vortex, allowing hot air to build far north and
pass deep into the Arctic Ocean environs.
Arctic coastal temperatures usually average less than 50 degrees Fahrenheit at this time of year, but the region beneath this Arctic heat dome has averaged about 15-20 degrees hotter over the past week. Further south, where the tundra fields and arboreal forests of Siberia lay, temperatures have been even warmer with highs stretching into the middle and upper 80s and even lower 90s in some isolated locations. The added heat and the occasional thunderstorm that will typically form under such highly unusual Arctic conditions enhances the chance of wildfires. Now, after a week of such conditions, more than a score of large fires rage.
Tuesday daytime temperatures for Siberia. Red indicates temperatures ranging from 77-86 degrees Fahrenheit. Note the broad swath of these temperatures riding up from Russia all the way to the Arctic coastline. These measures represent daytime temperatures at the point recorded and do not necessarily record daily maximum temperatures for a given location.
Unfortunately, forecasts call for hot conditions to persist over this region of the Arctic at least until Saturday. Then, the heat dome and related Jet Stream bulge is predicted to slowly shift toward Europe, bringing heat, dryness and related risk of wildfires along with it.
This
particular heat wave is the most recent of many to plague the Arctic
during 2013. Large Arctic regions from Siberia, to Europe, to Canada
to Alaska experienced periods of extreme heat where temperatures rose
10, 15, 20 degrees or more (Fahrenheit) above average. The added heat
and evaporation in one region appeared to aid in the formation of
record floods in another with both Europe and Canada experiencing
some of their worst floods on record.
Strange
changes to the Jet Stream and the water cycle driving these extreme
events are directly related to human-caused global warming. In the
first instance, human-caused warming has set off a series of events
that have caused a major erosion of Northern Hemisphere sea ice.
Since 1979, more about 50% of sea ice extent and 80% of sea ice
volume has been lost. Since the 1900s, more than 60% of sea ice
extent has melted away. The sea ice, which tends to lock cold air in
the Arctic, is thus dramatically weakened. The result is that more
warm air tends to pool in the Arctic. As this happens, the
temperature difference between the North Pole and temperate regions
lessens. This loss of differential causes the Jet Stream to slow
down. As the Jet Stream slows, it tends to move more like a lazy
river, creating big loops, large high amplitude waves and numerous
cut off flows. The net result is that weather systems move more
slowly, causing weather patterns to persist over longer periods.
The
high amplitude waves that have tended to form in the Jet Stream also
result in warmer air being transported toward the North Polar region.
In the case of the current Siberian heatwave and wildfires, this is
exactly what is happening. What we have seen, this summer, is a ring
of very hot conditions developing in the higher Latitude regions from
about 60 degrees North to about 80 degrees North. This is the zone
where much of the extreme Arctic heating has emerged.
This
second factor, added atmospheric heat, causes greater evaporation to
occur, especially in regions where the heat is most intense. On
average, the global hydrological cycle, which is the net rate at
which water evaporates and then comes back to the Earth in some form
of precipitation, increases its intensity by 8% for each degree
Celsius of warming. Currently, average global temperatures are about
.8 degrees Celsius hotter than the 1880s average. So the rate at
which water evaporates and the rate at which it falls from the skies
as rain and snow has increased by more than 6%. In the hot regions
under the Jet Stream bulges and related heat dome high pressure
systems this means far more intense soil drying and risk of
wildfires. In the wet regions of cut off lows and down-slopes in the
polar Jet Stream this means more intense rainfall events.
In
essence, this is how human caused global warming is helping to drive
extreme weather events now. And the current Siberian heatwave and
related wildfires is just one case in point.
Links:
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.