A New Arctic Cyclone Could Be Among the Most Powerful On Record
This is a histoircal photo
8
June, 2018
Weather
watchers may be more preoccupied of late with storms popping off in
the Gulf of Mexico and the
eastern Pacific
The
new storm’s occurrence in June is also noteworthy. Big cyclones
like this don’t normally start hitting the Arctic until late
summer. The Great Arctic Cyclone of 2012 spun up in August as did
a major
storm in
2016.
“Preliminarily,
this storm could rank in the Top 10 for Arctic Cyclones in June as
well as for the summer (June through August) in strength,” Steven
Cavallo, a meteorologist at the University of Oklahoma, told Earther
via email.
Xiangdong
Zhang,
a scientist at the International Arctic Research Center who
specializes in Arctic cyclones, cited a few factors responsible for
the storm’s formation, including low
sea ice cover in the North Atlantic which
has increased the amount of heat in the atmosphere, a strong
temperature gradient between land and sea, and the stratospheric
polar vortex, an area of low pressure just above the storm.
“The
downward intrusion of this polar vortex intensified [the] storm,”
Zhang told Earther via email.
The
no-name storm reached peak photogenicity yesterday, with the National
Oceanic Atmospheric Administration capturing a
stunning high-resolution
image.
While
your typical late-season Arctic cyclones are notorious for chewing up
sea ice, what this early season beast will mean for ice remains to be
seen
.
“This
storm is very quick-moving and occurring earlier in the season,”
University of California, Irvine Ph.D. candidate Zack Labe told
Earther via Twitter direct message. “Its impacts to sea ice are
likely not comparable to these other strong cyclones that have
occurred later in the summer.”
Labe
noted that early summer storms can favor cooler, cloudier conditions,
slowing down the loss of sea ice, which typically bottoms out in
September. However, he added that a storm of this strength “may
precondition the ice for easier melt later in the season.”
Zhang
said that due to the storm’s location, it can transport more sea
ice out of the Arctic through the passage between Greenland and
Svalbard known as the Fram Straight. “This will contribute to
Arctic sea ice decrease, in particular thick ice,” he said.
Storm
or no, it’s been a weird, bad year for Arctic sea ice so far.
After limping
along all winter,
Bering sea ice was
basically gone by
May, months ahead of schedule. Even before this storm, sea
ice around Svalbard was
looking more like it should in September. Overall, Arctic sea ice
extent for May was at its second-lowest on record, according to the
National Snow and Ice Data Center’s latest
monthly sea ice report released
on June 6.
The
role of rising temperatures in driving down sea ice is well
established. But there’s also growing evidence that climate change
could fuel more ice-shredding cyclones. Research going
back to the early 2000s suggests Arctic cyclone activity is on the
rise. And a study
published in April concluded
that these storms will become more frequent and intense in the future
as the contrast between land and sea temperatures continues to rise.
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