Possible Associations between the Number of Cold Days over East Asia and Arctic Oscillation and Arctic Warming
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Data and Method
3. Atmospheric Circulation Anomalies Associated with NCD
4. Atmospheric Circulation Anomalies Associated with AO/Arctic Warming
5. Summary and Discussions
- NCD over East Asia had a downtrend (−0.386 day·decade−1) during 1956–1990 and an uptrend (1.645 day·decade−1) during 1991–2015. Additionally, increasing NCD was associated with the enhancement of SH in the lower troposphere, strengthening of EAT and UBH in the middle troposphere and deceleration of the westerlies at mid–high-latitudes over Eurasia, and the variations of the above systems were conducive to the intrusion of cold air into East Asia.
- During 1956–1990, NCD was significantly linked with AO (r = −0.59, exceeding 99% confidence level based on the Student’s t-test). During 1991–2015, the NCD index was notably correlated with T2m to the north of the Barents–Kara Sea (0–80° E, 73–84° N).
- During 1956–1990, the trends of SLP, Z500 and U300 indicated the weakening of SH, Eurasian Blockings and EAT, acceleration of mid–high-latitudes westerlies, and they explained why NCD decreased over East Asia. During 1991–2015, the situation tended to be the opposite, and this was why NCD increased over East Asia.
- When AO index increased during 1956–1990, the SLP field showed significantly negative anomalies at mid–high-latitudes over Eurasia and over the Arctic, indicating an obvious weakening of SH. Meanwhile, significant negative Z500 anomalies existed over the Ural Mountains and positive Z500 anomalies emerged over East Asia, implying the weakening of UBH and EAT. In addition, U300 displayed a “positive–negative–positive” anomalous band from low-latitudes, mid-latitudes to high-latitudes over East Asia–North Pacific region; this three-band structure was linked with the weakening of northerly wind over East Asia. These were favorable conditions for a weaker-than-normal EAWM, and T2m over East Asia increased, suggesting decreased NCD over East Asia. When AO index decreased, the situation tended to be opposite.
- When Arc-index increased during 1991–2015, on the one hand, SH reinforced and further led to more NCD over East Asia; on the other hand, the 1000–500 hPa thickness field demonstrated a “north positive–south negative” pattern, resulting in a thickness meridional gradient decrease between mid-latitudes and high-latitudes in the northern hemisphere, and the reduced thickness meridional gradient led to the decelerated westerlies at mid-latitudes over Eurasia, further bring about the enhancement of EAT and UBH, i.e., the meridional pressure gradient of the Eurasian mid–high-latitudes circulation increased, which was conducive to the southward transportation of cold air, eventually causing a colder East Asia, i.e., more NCD emerged over East Asia. When Arc-index decreased, the situation tends to be opposite.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Song, W.; Ye, X. Possible Associations between the Number of Cold Days over East Asia and Arctic Oscillation and Arctic Warming. Atmosphere 2021, 12, 842. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos12070842
Song W, Ye X. Possible Associations between the Number of Cold Days over East Asia and Arctic Oscillation and Arctic Warming. Atmosphere. 2021; 12(7):842. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos12070842
Chicago/Turabian StyleSong, Wei, and Xiaochen Ye. 2021. "Possible Associations between the Number of Cold Days over East Asia and Arctic Oscillation and Arctic Warming" Atmosphere 12, no. 7: 842. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos12070842
APA StyleSong, W., & Ye, X. (2021). Possible Associations between the Number of Cold Days over East Asia and Arctic Oscillation and Arctic Warming. Atmosphere, 12(7), 842. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos12070842