Abstract

AbstractIn winter, the warm water of the Gulf Stream anchors a salient precipitation band. Previous studies suggested a close relationship between the sea surface temperature (SST) front and the precipitation band through sea level pressure (SLP) adjustment. This study uses 17 years of high-resolution precipitation observations to reveal that the variation in wintertime precipitation over the Gulf Stream is related to the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) at the interannual time scale. The moisture budget analysis shows that the climatological precipitation band is supported by the large evaporation from the Florida Current, mean flow, and synoptic moisture convergence within the boundary layer, with a negative contribution from mean-flow moisture advection by the prevailing northwesterlies. For interannual variability, by contrast, the negative contribution of mean-flow moisture advection significantly decreases due to anomalous southeasterlies west of the intensified Azores high at the positive NAO phase. The contributions from mean-flow moisture advection and mean and synoptic convergence vary greatly along the Gulf Stream. In addition, mean-flow and synoptic moisture convergences positively contribute to the precipitation band both in climatology and at the interannual time scale, indicative of a positive feedback between precipitation and boundary layer convergence. Our analysis suggests that the SLP adjustment mechanism across the SST front is still at work in interannual variability, and the variation of synoptic activities over the Gulf Stream plays an important role in modulating the frontal precipitation. By relating the frontal precipitation to the NAO, this study bridges small-scale air–sea interaction and large-scale atmospheric circulation.

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