Abstract

AbstractPersistent hot–dry or cold–wet summer weather can have significant impacts on agriculture, health, and the environment. For northwestern Europe, these weather regimes are typically linked to, respectively, blocked or zonal jet stream states. The fundamental dynamics underlying these circulation states are still poorly understood. Edward Lorenz postulated that summer circulation may be either fully or almost intransitive, implying that part of the phase space (capturing circulation variability) cannot be reached within one specific summer. If true, this would have major implications for the predictability of summer weather and our understanding of the drivers of interannual variability of summer weather. Here, we test the two Lorenz hypotheses (i.e., fully or almost intransitive) for European summer circulation, capitalizing on a newly available very large ensemble (2000 years) of present-day climate data in the fully coupled global climate model EC-Earth. Using self-organizing maps, we quantify the phase space of summer circulation and the trajectories through phase space in unprecedented detail. We show that, based on Markov assumptions, the summer circulation is strongly dependent on its initial state in early summer with the atmospheric memory ranging from 28 days up to ~45 days. The memory is particularly long if the initial state is either a blocked or a zonal flow state. Furthermore, we identify two groups of summers that are characterized by distinctly different trajectories through phase space, and that prefer either a blocked or zonal circulation state, respectively. These results suggest that intransitivity is indeed a fundamental property of the atmosphere and an important driver of interannual variability.

Highlights

  • The Northern Hemisphere summer of 2018 was characterized by concurrent hot and dry extremes across North America, Europe, and Asia (Vogel et al 2019)

  • We studied jet stream dynamics behind these persistent summer extremes

  • Our study is motivated by work of Edward Lorenz, who postulated that summer circulation may be either fully or almost intransitive (Lorenz 1990)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Northern Hemisphere summer of 2018 was characterized by concurrent hot and dry extremes across North America, Europe, and Asia (Vogel et al 2019). In western Europe, hot–dry conditions extended from April to September, leading to one of the most severe droughts in terms of its impact on agriculture and the ecosystem (Buras et al 2020; Philip et al 2020; Vanderkelen et al 2020; Beillouin et al 2020). Model projections show a systematic increase in the persistence of summer weather, which might favor prolonged drought conditions, and persistent precipitation extremes (Pfleiderer et al 2019). In Europe, hot– dry extremes are typically linked to a blocked circulation state (Simmonds 2018).

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call