Abstract

Abstract This study investigates interannual variations of surface air temperature (SAT) over mid- and high latitudes of Eurasia during boreal spring and their association with snow, atmospheric circulation, and sea surface temperature (SST) changes. The leading mode of spring SAT variations is featured by same-sign anomalies over most regions. The second mode features a tripole anomaly pattern with anomalies over the central part opposite to those over the eastern and western parts of Eurasia. A diagnosis of surface heat flux anomalies suggests that snow change contributes partly to SAT anomalies in several regions mainly by modulating surface shortwave radiation but cannot explain SAT changes in other regions. Atmospheric circulation anomalies play an important role in spring SAT variability via wind-induced heat advection and cloud-induced surface radiation changes. Positive SAT anomalies are associated with anomalous westerly winds from the North Atlantic Ocean or with anomalous anticyclone and southerly winds. Negative SAT anomalies occur in regions of anomalous cyclone and northerly winds. Atmospheric circulation anomalies associated with the first mode have a close relationship to spring Arctic Oscillation (AO), indicating the impact of the AO on continental-scale spring SAT variations over the mid- and high latitudes of Eurasia. The atmospheric circulation anomalies associated with the second mode feature a wave pattern over the North Atlantic and Eurasia. Such a wave pattern is related to a tripole SST anomaly pattern in the North Atlantic Ocean, signifying the contribution of the North Atlantic Ocean state to the formation of a tripole SAT anomaly pattern over the mid- and high latitudes of Eurasia.

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