Abstract
Abstract. Previous studies have shown that the mean latitude of the sub-tropical jet streams in both hemispheres have shifted toward the poles over the last few decades. This paper presents a study of the movement of both the subtropical and Polar fronts, the location of the respective jet streams, between 1979 and 2010 at mid-latitudes, using total ozone measurements to identify the sharp horizontal boundary that occurs at the position of the fronts. Previous studies have shown that the two fronts are the boundaries of three distinct regimes in the stratosphere, corresponding to the Hadley, Ferrel, and polar meridionally overturning circulation cells in the troposphere. Over the period of study the horizontal area of the Hadley cell has increased at latitudes between 20 and 60 degrees while the area of the Polar cell has decreased. A linear regression analysis was performed to identify the major factors associated with the movement of the subtropical jet streams. These were: (1) changes in the Tropical land plus ocean temperature, (2) direct radiative forcing from greenhouse gases in the troposphere, (3) changes in the temperature of the lower tropical stratosphere, (4) the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation, and (5) volcanic eruptions. The dominant mechanism was the direct radiative forcing from greenhouse gases. Between 1979 and 2010 the poleward movement of the subtropical jet streams was 3.7 ± 0.3 degrees in the Northern Hemisphere and 6.5 ± 0.2 degrees in the Southern Hemisphere. Previous studies have shown that weather systems tend to follow the jet streams. The observed poleward movement in both hemispheres over the past thirty years represents a significant change in the position of the sub-tropical jet streams, which should lead to significant latitudinal shifts in the global weather patterns and the hydrologic cycle.
Highlights
The jet streams are narrow bands of fast, meandering neartropopause winds that flow around the globe
There are two near-tropopause jet streams, the subtropical jet, imbedded in the sub-tropical upper troposphere front which is found in the poleward edge of the Hadley circulation, and the Polar jet, imbedded in the upper troposphere Polar front which is located above the Polar front zone (Holton, 1992; Bluestein, 1993)
Four climate indices were used in the linear regression analysis; Tropical land plus ocean surface temperature, radiative forcing in the troposphere (RADF), the lower stratosphere temperature in the tropics (TEMP) and the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO)
Summary
The jet streams are narrow bands of fast, meandering neartropopause winds that flow around the globe. Hudson et al (2003) showed that, on any day, the total column ozone field could be used to identify the position of the sub-tropical and Polar upper tropospheric fronts, the location of the subtropical and Polar jet streams, respectively. They found that the total ozone value associated with the center of the frontal boundary on a particular day was constant with longitude, with a slight latitude dependence They were able to identify three distinct stratospheric regimes (Tropical, mid-latitude and Polar), separated by the subtropical and Polar fronts. Seidel and Randel (2007) examined changes in the tropopause height derived from rawinsonde measurements and the NCAR/NCEP and ERA-40 reanalysis data sets They found that between 1979 and 2005 the Tropical belt widened from between 3 and 8 degrees latitude.
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