Abstract

Abstract. The teleconnections between meteorological parameters of the Arctic and the eastern Baltic Sea regions were analysed based on the NCEP-CFSR and ERA-Interim reanalysis data for 1979–2015. The eastern Baltic Sea region was characterised by meteorological values at a testing point (TP) in southern Estonia (58° N, 26° E). Temperature at the 1000 hPa level at the TP have a strong negative correlation with the Greenland sector (the region between 55–80° N and 20–80° W) during all seasons except summer. Significant teleconnections are present in temperature profiles from 1000 to 500 hPa. The strongest teleconnections between the same parameter at the eastern Baltic Sea region and the Arctic are found in winter, but they are clearly affected by the Arctic Oscillation (AO) index. After removal of the AO index variability, correlations in winter were below ±0.5, while in other seasons there remained regions with strong (|R| > 0.5, p < 0.002) correlations. Strong correlations (|R| > 0.5) are also present between different climate variables (sea-level pressure, specific humidity, wind speed) at the TP and different regions of the Arctic. These teleconnections cannot be explained solely with the variability of circulation indices. The positive temperature anomaly of mild winter at the Greenland sector shifts towards east during the next seasons, reaching the Baltic Sea region in summer. This evolution is present at 60 and 65° N but is missing at higher latitudes. The most permanent lagged correlations in 1000 hPa temperature reveal that the temperature in summer at the TP is strongly predestined by temperature in the Greenland sector in the previous spring and winter.

Highlights

  • Over the past half a century, the Arctic has warmed at about twice the global rate (IPCC, 2013), a phenomenon called the Arctic amplification (AA)

  • According to Sato et al (2014) warm southerly advection is favourable for retreating sea ice over the Barents Sea and warming of air aloft, whereas sea ice decline would result in warming over the Barents Sea because of anomalous turbulent heat fluxes

  • Screen et al (2012) found that sea ice concentration and sea surface temperature explain a large portion of the observed Arctic near-surface warming, whereas remote sea surface temperature changes explain the majority of observed warming aloft

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past half a century, the Arctic has warmed at about twice the global rate (IPCC, 2013), a phenomenon called the Arctic amplification (AA). On the other hand, Perlwitz et al (2015) disagree with the common assumption that sea ice decline is primarily responsible for the amplified Arctic tropospheric warming. They found that from October to December, the main factors responsible for the Arctic deep tropospheric warming are (1) the recent decadal fluctuations and (2) long-term changes in sea surface temperatures. These two factors are located outside the Arctic. The observed enhanced warming of the Arctic, referred to as the AA, is expected to be related

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