Atmospheric intraseasonal variability, especially in the extratropics during the cold season, is characterized by preferred large-scale quasi-stationary flow patterns that have non-Gaussian characteristics. They are known as weather regimes and can be associated with significant temperature and precipitation anomalies. Several observation- based and model studies have shown that El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Madden and Julian Oscillation (MJO) forcing affects the relative frequency of occurrence of circulation regimes. The ENSO forcing is particularly important for the Pacific North-American (PNA) region, whose intraseasonal variability is directly linked to tropical Pacific SST anomalies. The MJO forcing affects the occurrence (and sub-seasonal predictability) of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and, to a lesser extent, the Euro-Atlantic Blocking. On the other hand, several recent studies have shown that wintertime large scale extratropical circulation over both the Pacific North American and the Euro-Atlantic sectors exhibits a non-negligible interdecadal variability, which seems to be related to a decadal modulation of the tropical-extratropical teleconnections. In this study we use century reanalysis datasets and a range of climate simulations to investigate the interdecadal variability of extratropical weather regimes and their associated tropical and extratropical teleconnections. The implications of the results of this study for assessing future climate change are discussed.
Decadal variability in weather regimes and teleconnections in reanalysis datasets and climate simulations.
Corti Susanna;Fabiano Federico;Meccia Virna
2019
Abstract
Atmospheric intraseasonal variability, especially in the extratropics during the cold season, is characterized by preferred large-scale quasi-stationary flow patterns that have non-Gaussian characteristics. They are known as weather regimes and can be associated with significant temperature and precipitation anomalies. Several observation- based and model studies have shown that El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Madden and Julian Oscillation (MJO) forcing affects the relative frequency of occurrence of circulation regimes. The ENSO forcing is particularly important for the Pacific North-American (PNA) region, whose intraseasonal variability is directly linked to tropical Pacific SST anomalies. The MJO forcing affects the occurrence (and sub-seasonal predictability) of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and, to a lesser extent, the Euro-Atlantic Blocking. On the other hand, several recent studies have shown that wintertime large scale extratropical circulation over both the Pacific North American and the Euro-Atlantic sectors exhibits a non-negligible interdecadal variability, which seems to be related to a decadal modulation of the tropical-extratropical teleconnections. In this study we use century reanalysis datasets and a range of climate simulations to investigate the interdecadal variability of extratropical weather regimes and their associated tropical and extratropical teleconnections. The implications of the results of this study for assessing future climate change are discussed.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


