Exceptionally
rare warming above Antarctica may be affecting NZ's weather
20
August, 2019
One
of the southern hemisphere's rarest phenomena may be under way in the
skies above Antarctica and could be driving New Zealand's stormy
August weather.
Meteorologists
are debating whether a sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) began
earlier this month, putting a wobble into the polar vortex of
westerly winds around the Antarctic and allowing freezing air to
escape more easily and head towards southern New Zealand.
Whether
one is or isn't already occurring, computer models are showing a much
more significant winter stratospheric warming could begin in about 10
days or a fortnight.
Scientists
are unsure what is happening in the stratosphere - the second layer
of the Earth's atmosphere - this month. In this 2018 photo, the
Fiordland College Space Programme's crew, led by teacher Christoph
Zink, prepare to launch a helium balloon to rise 33km into the
stratosphere from Manapouri.
Only
two SSWs have ever been recorded in the southern hemisphere - a major
event at this time of year in 2002 and a minor one in 2010. SSWs are
more frequent in the northern hemisphere in winter due to land masses
close to the North Pole.
Blue
Skies Weather forecaster Tony Trewinnard told Stuff that an SSW
forecast late last month had begun early this month and had now
probably peaked, with temperatures in the stratosphere 20km or more
above the Antarctic as much as 20 degrees Celsius warmer than the
long-term average.
Nacreous
("mother of pearl") clouds high in the stratosphere above
Scott Base in the Antarctic play a role in the formation of the ozone
hole (file photo).
PETER
WALKER
National
Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research meteorologist Ben Noll
told Stuff he was unconvinced that event was particularly
significant, given the temperature rise was still short of the 25C
threshold for a minor SSW determined by the Japan Meteorological
Agency.
A
major SSW is defined as a warming of 30 to 50C at those heights,
which is large enough to cause a reversal of prevailing winds through
the atmosphere from westerlies to easterlies.
"Something
potentially more interesting is signalled in the next 10 to 15 days,
showing a warming of 40-50 degrees. If this were to occur, it would
be more impressive than what has occurred so far this month in the
stratosphere.
The
March 2018 "Beast from the East" snowstorm blankets London.
The reversal from normal westerly winds to bitterly cold easterlies
across Europe was linked to a sudden stratospheric warming event over
the North Pole.
SUPPLIED
The
March 2018 "Beast from the East" snowstorm blankets London.
The reversal from normal westerly winds to bitterly cold easterlies
across Europe was linked to a sudden stratospheric warming event over
the North Pole.
"It
is worth keeping an eye on over the next week or two. [But] being a
keen watcher of winter in the northern hemisphere, I have seen a
number of occasions where the forecast 10 to15 days in advance was
too aggressive."
The
winter 2002 SSW came ahead of an unusually warm and windy September,
followed by the coldest October in 20 years.
The
stratosphere is the second layer of the Earth's atmosphere, in which
temperatures generally increase with height due to the concentration
of ozone. It extends to about 50km above the surface, and starts at
altitudes of between 7 and 10km over the poles and about 17km above
the equator.
Major
SSWs in the northern hemisphere have percolated down through the
atmosphere and reversed winter wind directions, leading to frigid
easterly winds and very cold, snowy winters across Europe, including
the "Beast from the East" in February and March 2018.
Trewinnard
said the current SSW appeared to be driving the country's unsettled
weather.
"The
impact of sudden warming high in the polar atmosphere is to 'knock'
the polar vortex out of shape. Over time - it takes two to six weeks
- the polar vortex gets a wobble, like a spinning top, and this
allows cold air from the Antarctic continent to 'leak' out into the
weather systems of the southern ocean.
"Eventually
this affects New Zealand as depressions and troughs of low pressure,
and cells of very cold air. This can make our weather colder and
stormier for a period of a month or two.
"Generally
this is looking like a stormy couple of months ahead, with frequent
rainfalls, cold outbreaks, and windier than normal weather for the
whole country.The periods likely to see the most impact from intense
weather systems are the last few days of August and the very
beginning of September, and again mid-September."
The
freezing weather conditions dubbed the "Beast from the East"
brought snow and sub-zero temperatures to many parts of the UK and
Europe.
Noll
said stormier than normal conditions were expected into September,
"and it might even last longer than that".
But
even with an SSW, it didn't necessarily mean New Zealand would "feel
the full impact".
"That
could be over South America, or even out over the oceans."
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